BfrUncaatar Farming, Saturday, Aprl 11, 1998 Ag Women Learn How To Get The Most Out Of Life LOU ANN GOOD Lancaster Fanning Staff STATE COLLEGE (Centre Co.) Family relationships can be the most rewarding and the most Crustrating. Combine them with operating the family Cum, and die realities of human nature often surface. “The family farm should exist to serve the family and not die other way around,” said Ron Eberfaard, motivational seminar leader and humorist. Eberfaard was one of the speak ers at the day-long Women In Agriculture Seminar sponsored by Monsanto last week. Held at State College, seminar topics dealt with how to get the most out of life from farm profits to family relationships. Eberhard poked fun at the idiosyncracics of family relation ships while giving rules to set up the groundwork to keep the farm and the family operating happily together. Eberhard’s research is drawn 'rom his work in helping6o2 fami ies in 43 states and from his own jxperienccs. After college be had returned to the 210-acre family r arm to farm in partnership without i written agreement. “I was fired by my own father,” Sbcrhard said. Through the experi ence Eberhard recognized the need for better communication among farm families and die need to put ;very verbal agreement in writing. He heads Eberhard Planning Ser vices to help other families work ogether successfully. He explained the dynamics that rause frustration and tattered relationships. Ebcrhard tackles sticky family xisiness problems with a list of ‘Ron’s Rules,” which include tome of the following: • Have a business plan. • Limit farm ownership to fami y members involved in the Misiness. • Always put a business plan together as if the business was going to end. • Listen to what is being said and to what is not being said. • Best way to set up a business is to plan as if you are working with the enemy. • Communicate goals to people who can help achieve them. • Primary reasons we need agreements in writing is because we are family. • Whenever children are involved in the family business, the children should know the Panel participants, from left, Melanie Rlchman, Rhonda Laudenslager, and Karen Hawbaker talk about hewing on their dairy farms, which range from small to large in Speakers at the Monsanto Women In Agriculture seminar Include, from left, Kay Siussar, Brad Hllty, Ron Eberhard, and Dr. Jennifer Garrett. The aesslons focused on how to get the most out of farm profits, time, and family relationships. lish strategies that enable many of them to improve the profitability, liquidity, and solvency of the fami ly business. He has developed loan propos als and obtained financing for major dairy expansions and busi ness restructuring for approxi mately 60 farming businesses, ranging from 200 to 500 cows. Fluctuating milk prices and drought and wet weather make it difficult to establish financial plans, but Hilty showed how graphing milk prices and crop yields over a 10-year period comes out with a fairly consistent aver age. Milk price trends from 1987 through 1997 showed an average $l4 for both the first five years and the latter five. The ability to thrive and survive is necessary despite dealing with record grain prices but poor forage quality, low milk prices, and drought Hilty said that changes in the dairy industry has been brought about from less government involvement restructuring of the milk pricing system and marketing order, shift of production centers, decreasing number erf farms, and a change in philosophy. Why do you need a dairy busi ness plan? “Dairying is a complex business and a business plan will greatly increase your chance of succeed ing. It serves like a toad map for the future and as a blueprint for success. Mote and more lenders ate requiring one,” Hilty said. A business dairy plan should be enacted prior to major changes, such as an expansion, debt restruc turing, adding a partner, shifting details of the family estate. • There is no independent finan cial decision. Every decision affects someone else. • Nothing is so unequal as giving equal treatment to unequal people. • Most family businesses are always cash short • Life insurance is the best way to transfer. • How generous you are with written plans should also depend an who (spouses) your children brought home. In the afternoon session, Ebcr iard used a series of quotes in a tumorous and entertaining manner to emphasize the importance of good family relationships. To improve communication. Ebetfaard challenged the audience o learn to change communication, where too much emphasis is on the T to commUcation, in which lis tening to the other person is the nost valuable tool in handling problems. Eberhard addressed the need to earn to handle setbacks and disap xrintmenls. He told of his family’s struggle when a granddaughter was bom with Down’s syndrome md of their ultimate acceptance of ► x «sr. 'if. s 'v > 5. s <*v- it with joy. “A single word that can make *ll the difference is ‘faith.* God ioesn’t give us faith in advance,” Bberhard said. Brad Hilty, owner and chief xnsultant of PLS Agrimanagc nent Associates, laid out the groundwork to do a financial analysis and to develop a strategic business plan. During the after noon session, Hilty also taught a workshop on how farm software and the Internet can save lime and money. Some of his advice included the following: “Set up a plan from a financial structure and from a fam ily standpoint Team management is important” Hilty said that on the road where he grew up, there were about SO dairy farms. That number is now reduced to two. “We are at a crossroads in the dairy business, not only due to technology but also as a business,” he said of the need to remain sol vent “You must manage as a busi ness, not as a family farm.” Hilty has worked with mote than 250 farm families to analyze fanning businesses and to estab- At 1 S *> V? Homestead NOTES enterprises, or when exiting or transferring the business. Hilty said that a plan is ineffec tive unless a strategy is developed for implementing it “Set up a monitoring system,’’ he said. Identifying a mission statement can be the most difficult part of your plan, but it need not be. A possible example could be to be a leading producer of high quality breeding stock. Hilty said the plan should be based upon a review of the past five years’ records—not tax records, but profit margins and working capital compared to debt ratio. Certain mathmatical formulas can be helpful when determining efficency ratios of the business but are not always the total picture. A general rule of thumb is that 6S percent or less of income should be used for paying expenses before salaries for yourself and other farm workers are deducted. In the pest, an acceptable debt per cow was $2,000-52,500, and that certainly allows a better chance of financial survival, Hilty said. But some cows provide much more income through high produc tion. A better formula would per haps be I.S times cow producing income. Some cows can cany as high as a $5,000 debt load and still be acceptable. “Earnings on a cow before inter est, taxes, and depreciation can be an avenge of $4OO to $450 per cow, but the actual goal should be $750 to $l,OOO per cow,” Hilty said. To examine if you are over mechanized. you need to look at production costs per unit and labor efficiencies. “Sometimes it it financially better to replace machinery rather than keep repair ing it,” Hilty said. “Poor forage quality and low cow comfort can put you out of business. There is no difference between productive versus non productive expenses,” Hilty said. As a rule of thumb, each farm worker should be able to generate $250,000 for a $25,000 income. Because the conference was sponsored by Monsanto, the day long event included a session by Dr. Jennifer Garrett, technical ser vices specialist for Monsanto, and a panel discussion about the usage of Posilac, a natural hormone used to boost milk production. Panel participants Rhonda Lau dens la ger, Karen Hawbaker, Chambers burg; and Melanie Richman of New Jersey talked about their atti tudes and experiences in using Posilac. better known as bovine somatotropin. Several participants not using Posilac and with no plans to do so in the future said that they found the session informative and interesting. Kay Slusser, who with her hus band was a former Holstein breed er and now head of Pennsylvania DHIA, taught a session on time management tips for farm wives, which appeared in last week’s issue of Lancaster Farming.