Farm Viability

    Research, tools, and information on how farmers can build and maintain an economically viable farm business.

    Compass tools

    Compass Tools help farmers with data-driven decision-making to become more profitable and sustainable. The CIAS Compass Toolbox contains a suite of whole farm profit management spreadsheet tools to help farmers understand their costs of production, identify what products and markets are best for them, and identify ways to improve profitability. Compass Workshops help train farmers and service providers to use these tools.

    Veggie Compass

    Livestock Compass

    Fruit & Nut Compass

    Pasture-Based Beef Enterprise Calculator

    OGRAIN Compass – NEW 2023 VERSION

    Grassland 2.0 Grazing Compass Tools

    These tools, built in collaboration with the Grassland 2.0 Program, evaluate a transition from a confinement to a pasture-based system of raising animals. They analyze the financials of the grazing season to estimate cost and labor savings. They help estimate the amount of land needed, paddock establishment and operating costs, and also include an evaluation of the nutritional composition of a feeding plan focused on grazing.

    Heifer Grazing Compass

    Beef Grazing Compass

    PUBLICATIONS AND OTHER RESOURCES

    • New Zealand internships provide eye-opening experience

      “I must say it was the hardest I’ve ever worked for free, but somehow I really didn’t mind. I knew that the knowledge I gained was priceless.” Those are the words of Mike Tomandl who recently completed a dairy farm internship in New Zealand. He and fellow intern Joe Heimerl went to New Zealand in…

    • Starting your own dairy farm (Research Brief #58)

      Despite volatile milk prices, hundreds of new farmers get started in dairying each year. Compared to other types of livestock farming, dairying can provide a higher income per animal, monthly paychecks, and, in many areas, more markets.

    • Nurturing the Next Generation of Wisconsin’s Dairy Farmers

      New dairy farmers often face high start-up costs for land, equipment and facilities. Volatile milk prices, long hours and hard work reduce the appeal of a career in dairy farming. To better understand the start-up strategies used by beginning dairy farmers, a research team surveyed 321 beginning dairy farmers in 1996. They also conducted in…

    CIAS PARTNERS

    Grassland 2.0

    Organic Grain Resource and Information Network (OGRAIN)

    Ellen Polishuk, Plant to Profit

    Jim Munsch, Deer Run Farm

    NEWS

    These tools, built in collaboration with the Grassland 2.0 Program, evaluate a transition from a confinement to a pasture-based system of raising animals. They analyze the financials of the grazing season to estimate cost and labor savings. They help estimate the amount of land needed, paddock establishment and operating costs, and also include an evaluation of the nutritional composition of a feeding plan focused on grazing.