Penn State Dairy Alliance Offers Businessense Training For Dairy CFOs UNIVERSITY PARK (Centre Co.) Penn State Dairy Alliance has developed a program to pro vide hands-on training in data collection and interpretation for chief financial officers of dairy farms. Called BusinesSense, the pro gram combines formal instruc tion, group discussion and com puter analysis in a small group setting so participants can learn from each other, as well as from the instructors. According to Brad Hilty, in formation management specialist with Penn State’s Dairy Alliance program, monitoring business performance is critical to main taining a competitive position in today’s dairy environment. Key decision-makers of the business must know what data is impor tant and how to interpret it. “The chief financial officer, who in many cases is the dairy producer and farm owner or their spouse, must know how to col lect, organize, process and report data in a format that is easily in terpreted,” Hilty says. Businesscnse has been de signed to train key decision mak ers in dairy businesses to make decisions in a systematic and standardized way using data management and analysis. The BusinesSense program will help participants answer these key questions: 1. What benchmarks are im portant in' monitorihg the per feffnance of a dairy business? How are the benchmarks used to pinpoint bottlenecks in an opera tion? % ' w ? December 3rd thru December IStttj1Stttj Monday-Friday 7:00 AM - 5:00 PM; Saturday 7:00 AM- Nbon CASH & CARRY • 10% DISCOUNT ON MOST ITEMS Dec. 3 - Merial 6f Sobering Dec. 4 - Intervet Dec. 5 - natural EFX Dec. 6 - Fort Dodge 2. How can standardization in data collection and organization improve the quality of informa tion used for decision-making? 3. What is the importance of knowing and controlling produc tion costs? Who is more profita ble, the low-cost producer or the producer who stresses produc tion? BusinesSense is a series of three meetings designed to pro gressively build the participants’ skills in information and business management. Session 1, Establishing a Baseline for Business Evaluation, features a lecture on “Bench marks and Bottlenecks Evalu ating Business Performance.” Participants will collect data re quired to complete the Pennsyli vania Dairy Farm Business Sum mary and conduct a comprehensive business analysis. Session 2, Data Interpreta tion and Standardization, will in clude lectures focusing on “Anal ysis Results and Data Distribution and Implementing Standardization in Information Management Practices.” A group discussion will help participants determine what management practices provide the best returns and identify opportunities to in crease profits in their business. Session 3, Calculating and Controlling Costs of Production, will offer participants hands-on experience in calculating a stan dardized cost of production with Dairy COPS, a computerized cost of production model developed by Hilty. The session also will Lunches will be Sponsored by: feature the lecture “Who retains the most money? Low Cost vs. High Production,” and a group discussion on practical methods for controlling costs and maxi mizing returns. Instructors for Businessense are Hilty and Jeff Hyde, Penn State assistant professor of agri cultural economics and farm business management specialist. The program is being offered around the statc. Each session be gins at 9:30 a.m. and ends at 3 p.m. The Lancaster County Series, offered in cooperation with Lan caster County Cooperative Ex tension, will be conducted at the Lancaster County Farm and Home Center. The dates are: Dec. 14 and Jan. 22,2002. Sessions will be held in north central Pennsylvania (Bradford, Tioga and Potter counties) on Dec. 19, Jan. 24 and Feb. 7,2002. The location will be announced later. The program will be offered in northwest Pennsylvania (Erie, Warren, Crawford, Venango, Forest, Mercer, Clarion counties) on Dec. 6, Jan. 7-8, 2002. The program will be held at the Link To Learn Computer Training Center in the Crawford County Industrial Park in Meadville. The cost of the program is $l5O for all three meetings. Addi tional individuals from a business can attend for an additional fee of $65 each. Checks should be made payable to Penn State Uni versity. ANNUAL Dec. 7 - Co-Pulsation Dec. 10 - Merial Dec. 11 - Intervet Dec. 12 - Agri Labs North River Paper Towels 4000 Towel Case $ 13.05 Skid of 42 Cases $ 12.85/Case Special Pricing Merial Da y s Discount NuHealth Eprinex Bovine I i 0 Liter 17Q Discount Supplement 5 Liter . Discount $ 38.85 Net 2.5 Liter- $ 25 Discount 5 Bale Price Discounts Available Only v . , , Jn ... . P§?- 3 §nd Dec.. 10 Pen-Aqueous Penicillin $ 8.95 250 ML Dated November 2001 (rtM eet>‘ oj mo lj Crops Conferences Set LEESPORT (Berks Co.) Wildlife pest management and an annual update about new products for agronomics are some of the topics being of fered at the Southeast Penn sylvania Crops Conferences in 2002. The program is a coopera tive educational effort between Agway, Moyer and Son Inc. and Penn State Cooperative Extension. Annual programs that were previously sponsored by these organizations, such as Penn State Crops Days and grower/ dealer meetings offered by Agway and Moyer & Son Inc., will not be conducted. The Southeast Pennsylvania Crops Conference is being conducted in lieu of these programs. There are four dates and lo cations. Growers can attend any meeting that fits their schedule. The meeting for Jan. 22 at the Leesport Farmers Market, Leesport and Jan. 25, East Brandywine Fireball, Guthriesville, is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. registration, with a 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. program. Lunch is served. The meeting for Jan. 23 at the Days Inn, Allentown and Jan. 24 at the Montgomery County 4-H Center, Creamery, will offer a day program, with four concurrent sessions. The sessions are scheduled to give producers maximum flexibility in their schedules and choice of topic. Registration begins at 9 a.m. and the program is scheduled COMING TUBS., DEC. 18, 2001 .'-.■wi FARM FOR PROFIT) and Pesticide Meetings Morning - 9:30 AM Gilson Martin * Farm For Profit Todd Reece - Insta-Gro Plant Food Free Lunch For Those Who Attend Morning Session Afternoon - 12:30 PM Jeff Stoltzfus - Extension Service John Flanagan - Syngenta Brian Loucks -Tlmac Evening - 7:00*9:00 PM Jeff Stoltzfus - Extension Service John Flanagan - Syngenta BrianLoucks - Tlmac 2 Corn & 2 Category Points Wilt Be Given For Afternoon & Evening Sessions Agriweb" System • Confines sand bedding in stalls • Provides uniform, stable surface in high use areas • Creates firm surface for stream crossing • Protects top soil on slopes & spillways List Price $225.00 SPECI AL PRICS 198,50 i\i Ui-I. .iy jj i*f ,I*/ from 9:30 a.m. to 1:45 p.m, Lunch is served. An evening meeting at both Allentown and Creamery is of fered especially for part-time farmers, starting with a 6 p.m. registration, dessert, and cof fee served at 6:30 p.m., and program from 7 to 9 p.m. Cost is $lO for daytime pro gram by Jan. 15, $l2 after Jan. IS. The evening program costs $5 by Jan. IS, $7 after Jan. 15. Producers in Berks, Bucks, Chester, Lehigh, Montgomery, Northampton, and Schuylkill counties are invited to attend. Pesticide credits will be of fered at all locations and a trade show will be in conjunc tion with the program. Penn State University spe cialists and agency representa tives from the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture and the Pennsylvania Game Commission will be present. Sponsors of the Southeast Pennsylvania Crops Confer ence include Agway, Aventis, BASF, Dow AgroSciences, Mid Atlantic Farm Credit, Monsanto, Moyer and Son Inc., Penn State Cooperative Extension, and Syngenta. For more information about the agenda or registration in formation, contact Mena Hau tau, Penn State Cooperative Extension-Berks County, (610) 378-1327, (610) 378-7961, e-mail: Berks.exten sion.psu.edu, or contact your local county extension office.