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In animal husbandry, the difference between farms is determined not only by technology or size but by management capacity. Two similar operations can yield completely different results depending on how they are managed.
High-performing farmers treat the farm as an integrated system rather than a collection of separate activities. They monitor key indicators daily, make rapid decisions, and continuously adjust processes. In these farms, errors are corrected immediately, not accumulated.
Conversely, underperforming farms tolerate or ignore problems: minor losses, delays, deviations from parameters. Individually, these may seem insignificant, but they accumulate and negatively affect overall outcomes.
Operational discipline is a critical factor. Adherence to feeding schedules, environmental parameters, and workflow protocols directly influences performance, even if not immediately perceived as an economic factor.
Ultimately, a high-performing farm results from consistent and coherent management. The difference lies not in resources but in how effectively they are utilized.
(Photo: Freepik)