Agribusiness Blueprint

Purdue University Center for Food and Agricultural Business

Agribusiness Blueprint is a limited-series podcast about how the modern agribusiness system was built and why the business of agriculture is fundamentally different from every other industry. Hosted by Purdue University’s Center for Food and Agricultural Business, this series tells the stories of the people, ideas and decisions that shaped the modern food and agricultural system, from early entrepreneurs like Johnny Appleseed to the economists, researchers and business leaders who helped define agribusiness as a discipline. Agriculture operates under a unique set of pressures – biological production, weather, global markets, government policy and decentralized decision-making – which forced the industry to develop its own management tools and strategy. This podcast is the story of how that happened and why it matters today.

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  1. 29. APR.

    Lean Agriculture

    What do a foot pedal trash can, Japanese automakers, and modern ag sales have in common?  They were all invented (in a manner of speaking) by Lillian Gilbreth, an engineer, mother of twelve, and one of the most influential figures in modern management science.  In this episode, host Sarah Mock and co-host Trey Malone trace Lillian's remarkable legacy from the factory floor all the way to the American farm. Alongside Scott Downey, Director of the Center for Food and Agricultural Business at Purdue University, we unpack how Lillian, and her husband Frank, pioneered the study of human motion, and laid the groundwork for Lean strategy, the waste-reduction framework that Japanese automakers like Honda and Subaru used to quietly overtake American car companies in the latter half of the 20th century. Then, we connect Lean thinking directly to the world of agribusiness — exploring what it really means to eliminate waste in ag sales, why risk management (not relationships) may be the true product a salesperson delivers to a farmer, and why so many sales managers can't answer the simple question: "How much does it cost to put a salesperson in front of a customer?" The conversation also tackles the data overload facing both agribusinesses and farms today, the overlooked problem of labor waste in agriculture, and how AI may be shifting the most valuable skill in ag sales from providing answers to asking better questions. In this episode: Why it's motion, and not time, that makes businesses more efficientHow Japanese automakers used Lean to overtake American manufacturing — and what agriculture can learn from itThe real product ag salespeople deliver to farmers (hint: it's not information)Why knowing your "measure of motion" is the first step to eliminating wasteHow "just in time" gave way to "just in case" — and why both are valid Lean outcomesWhy the future of rural America might hinge on creating smarter, leaner agribusinessesResources: Learn more about Purdue's Center for Food and Agricultural Business at agribusiness.purdue.edu

    31 Min.
  2. STAFFEL 1 – TRAILER

    Agribusiness Blueprint | The Trailer

    Agriculture is unlike any other industry.  No other sector is so vital to human life, and so dependent on countless small businesses who contend daily with weather and natural variability, dozens of global markets, evolving technologies, and wild geopolitical uncertainty. The businesses that operate in this unique and complex world are also unlike any other, and they didn’t get that way by accident.  Agribusiness leaders have solved some of the hardest managerial problems on Earth.  To operate in this unconventional world, these leaders built one-of-a-kind tools that were influenced not just by economics and finance, but by industrial engineering, psychology, experimental economics, entrepreneurship, policy, and agricultural extension. Understanding how these tools were made, and how they shape the agribusiness world, is critical for those looking to stay relevant in the industry’s future.  That’s what we’re doing here. Each episode, we’ll tackle a conceptual breakthrough and the people who made it possible, and share stories about how these breakthroughs are still working, and evolving, today. You’ll hear familiar stories through new lenses, and emerging stories that will challenge what you think you know about the people and businesses that make food and agriculture work. Plus, you’ll meet entrepreneurs and thinkers who discovered and transformed agribusiness over the last 50 years, getting a crash course in how agribusiness works, what to do when it doesn’t, and where it's going from here.  This is Agribusiness Blueprint. Season premiere coming Wednesday, April 8th, wherever you listen to podcasts.

    3 Min.

Trailer

Info

Agribusiness Blueprint is a limited-series podcast about how the modern agribusiness system was built and why the business of agriculture is fundamentally different from every other industry. Hosted by Purdue University’s Center for Food and Agricultural Business, this series tells the stories of the people, ideas and decisions that shaped the modern food and agricultural system, from early entrepreneurs like Johnny Appleseed to the economists, researchers and business leaders who helped define agribusiness as a discipline. Agriculture operates under a unique set of pressures – biological production, weather, global markets, government policy and decentralized decision-making – which forced the industry to develop its own management tools and strategy. This podcast is the story of how that happened and why it matters today.

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