The mineral thread got me thinking, can you see the smoke through the rain?
GF talked about eliminating Ivomec, and a couple of others about eliminating minerals from their programs. We are always trying to cut costs, and further even eliminate inputs. While we are not yet in a position to capitalize on our "brand" with the consumer (we are still in the cattle business, not the food business at home), are we robbing Peter to pay Paul.
I am reading a book called the New Brand World and one of the cases he talks about is a large successful company that had the market cornered and focused totally on cost cutting (accountants in charge). A few years later they had competitors who had focused on product quality and were kicking their hind end. Even the company had to admit the competitors products were better.
We may be headed down the same path with our current cattle mentality (although I am not 100% sure how to get the value of increased cost back out).
For example we know Vit E late in the feeding period extends product shelf life, we know forage fed increases beneficial fatty acid composition, etc.
There are tradeoffs here, and I think we may have been making these tradeoffs for too long in some areas.
The lowest cost producer in the commodity game will win the race, but for us in our operation the finish line of that race is nowhere near where I want to be at the end of the day.
GF talked about eliminating Ivomec, and a couple of others about eliminating minerals from their programs. We are always trying to cut costs, and further even eliminate inputs. While we are not yet in a position to capitalize on our "brand" with the consumer (we are still in the cattle business, not the food business at home), are we robbing Peter to pay Paul.
I am reading a book called the New Brand World and one of the cases he talks about is a large successful company that had the market cornered and focused totally on cost cutting (accountants in charge). A few years later they had competitors who had focused on product quality and were kicking their hind end. Even the company had to admit the competitors products were better.
We may be headed down the same path with our current cattle mentality (although I am not 100% sure how to get the value of increased cost back out).
For example we know Vit E late in the feeding period extends product shelf life, we know forage fed increases beneficial fatty acid composition, etc.
There are tradeoffs here, and I think we may have been making these tradeoffs for too long in some areas.
The lowest cost producer in the commodity game will win the race, but for us in our operation the finish line of that race is nowhere near where I want to be at the end of the day.
Comment