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In livestock farms, problems arise daily, but the real difference is not their occurrence, but the speed of response. Delayed intervention turns small deviations into constant losses that are difficult to recover later.
In dairy farms, a decrease of 2–3 liters per head per day, observed with a delay of several days, can mean production losses of over 10% across the entire herd. In the swine sector, the late identification of a consumption imbalance or a health issue leads to weight differences of 8–12% at the end of the production cycle.
In poultry farms, delayed reaction to changes in temperature or ventilation affects uniformity and increases mortality, even if the initial issue was minor. In all cases, time is the factor that amplifies or limits the impact.
The signal is simple: the data exists, but it is not monitored daily or does not generate rapid decisions. Most often, the problem is not the lack of information, but the delay in response.
Efficient farms operate on rapid decision-making. Daily monitoring, immediate intervention, and small but consistent adjustments. Time is not just a resource, but a factor of production.
(Photo: Freepik)