Canadian agriculture technology companies mature and grow

I recently attended the Spark event put on by the Grand River Agricultural Society in Elora, Ont. I’ve got to know many of the company founders who were pitching for another $5,000 cheque at the event.

Some of them have been on long journeys to get their products to market. In some cases, ag tech company founders are no longer leading the companies they started. Sometimes they have life changes, or realize that the company needs other skills to survive.

Sometimes investors make that decision for the founder, too. That’s a tough outcome for someone who has put a lot of themselves into something that’s not just a job but a passion — but it also means that the company can survive.

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Trading with Europe and the United Kingdom in an effort to create a united front against the U.S. makes much more sense than climbing into bed with a threat that is even worse than what’s posed by the Americans.

In most cases, the founder remains in charge and there’s good growth.

At the Spark event, Vetson, a virtual veterinary care company founded in 2022, reported that it is now connected to 600 farmers and nine veterinary clinics. It is also connected to a large veterinary product distribution company to help get medications to the farmers who connect with veterinarians through their app.

Farm Health Guardian now has its tracking system on 2,400 trucks in the pork sector in Canada and the United States. It merged with a complementary American company and is working on facial recognition for barns.

Cattlelytics, last year’s Spark event winner, now has almost 250,000 cattle on its platform that helps farmers bring together disparate data and manage cattle and employees.

These are just some of the companies that have scaled to where they are being used regularly on farms or by farm service providers.

The current business isn’t the first major experience for most of the founders. Many have run other businesses, such as Rob Hannam of Farm Health Guardian. Some are serial entrepreneurs and get better with each launch. Others have worked for diverse businesses and can pour the sum of their expertise into their venture, like Shari van de Pol of Cattleytics.

Experience matters, but so does being able to build a funding ecosystem to support the company as it grows.

We’ve come a long way in Canada in the past five years, with private investors such as RHA Ventures and Ag Capital Canada providing funds and expertise. Institutional investors such as Farm Credit Canada and Conexus credit union with its Cultivator fund have joined the party.

The wild money that flowed into ag tech a few years ago has dried up, but the committed continue to find a way forward, and that includes several growing companies in Canada.

John Greig is the senior livestock editor with Glacier FarmMedia.

Source: producer.com

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