Deere tapping into Apple-like tech model to drive revenue
Send a link to a friend
[May 26, 2022] By
Bianca Flowers and Joseph White
BONDURANT, Iowa (Reuters) - Deere & Co has
sold its tractors and other equipment to farmers for decades, but the
world's largest agriculture machinery manufacturer is tearing a page
from the technology world's playbook - combining cutting-edge hardware
with software and subscription models to drive revenue growth.
In a world with a dwindling number of grain producers and a growing
population, Deere and its rivals are developing self-driving equipment
loaded with the latest software that is harvesting a new kind of bumper
crop: data. All that translates into recurring revenue, something
companies like Apple have long enjoyed and industrial manufacturers like
Deere hungrily eye.
"The more technology we can develop to allow farmers to get productivity
out of their land without having to spend so much money on fertilizer
and inputs, the better off everybody is," Julian Sanchez, Deere's
director of emerging technology, told Reuters.
Investments in automation for high-horsepower equipment is only at its
inception for Deere and rivals AGCO and CNH Industrial. The next step is
to equip machines to plant seeds using satellite imagery and soil data,
Sanchez said.
While Deere has not outlined what that could mean to its bottom line,
last fall U.S. automaker General Motors Co said it was targeting up to
$25 billion in software-driven services by 2030, and added its Cruise
self-driving unit could achieve $50 billion in annual revenue within six
years.
The race among farm equipment companies to automate agriculture has
accelerated amid a burgeoning food crisis. And Deere's strategy around
scaling its suite of tech products is now in the spotlight, after the
manufacturer's stock plunged 14% on May 20 following a quarterly revenue
miss. It was the biggest drop for Deere in 14 years.
The timing comes as the war in Ukraine and widespread drought in key
grain-producing countries have roiled commodity markets, causing grain
and farm input prices to spike as supplies shrink. That, in turn, has
U.S. farmers scrambling to boost crop yields, yet limit their fertilizer
and pesticide use.
That and a shrinking farm labor workforce has opened the door for Deere
and others to make their high-tech push. For farmers, the prize is
higher crop yields. For Illinois-based Deere, it's the revenue.
Autonomous machinery is where Deere is placing its bet as artificial
intelligence becomes more integrated in farming. Its self-driving 8R
tillage tractor will be the latest addition to the company's
algorithm-enabled offerings when the green machines go on sale in the
fall.
While the new tractor will be priced at $500,000, the autonomy feature
will be sold separately. Deere declined to reveal the pricing model, but
executives said earlier this year a subscription service is one option.
[to top of second column] |
Deere & Co. 8R autonomous tractor is pictured at Jensen Test Farm in
Bondurant, Iowa, U.S., April 28, 2022. Picture taken April 28, 2022.
REUTERS/Bianca Flowers
The recurring revenue model can be economically favorable to heavy machinery
manufacturers "based on those data insights," said Michael Staebe, a Bain &
Company partner focused on machinery.
In Deere’s case, using a subscription model by either selling or leasing its
driverless tractor can result in higher margins.
"After expenses, every incremental dollar falls straight to the bottom line,"
Edward Jones analyst Matt Arnold said. "We would expect it to be an attractive
offering to farmers given the efficiency it offers them, and lucrative to
Deere."
AGRONOMIC DATA HELPS BOTTOM LINE
Farmers have long been wary about how machinery and supplier firms profit off
the data gleaned from their operations, and how secure such data is. But with
farmers facing economic pressures, Deere and other manufacturers said it is
easier to sell farmers on making such investments.
One key reason: The ability to glean crop insights from huge amounts of
agronomic data takes the guesswork out of when to plant and how many seeds to
use - which saves farmers money. "Everybody in the industry is much more
data-focused than we have ever seen them," said Michael Boehlje, a professor at
Purdue University. "(Companies) can do profit projections by geographic space in
fields. That takes you to a different level of thinking and analysis.”
In 2020, Deere acquired Harvest Profit, a farm profitability software company
that has been integrated into the John Deere Operations Center. The platform
stores and lets farmers access their machine data from the cloud.
"When I look at what precision ag has done for our operations and what we can
accomplish in a day's time compared to 10 to 20 years ago, it's so much easier,"
said Jeremy Jack, a row crop farmer in Mississippi and chief executive of Silent
Shade Planting Co.
Ron Heck's fleet of Case IH combines and tractors are equipped with automated
steering to harvest his 4,000 acres where he rotates soybeans and corn.
The fourth-generation farmer in Iowa said some of his new equipment is loaded
with technology. "Unfortunately for us it costs more, but hopefully the costs
will be paid back in the long run by better efficiency."
(Reporting by Bianca Flowers and Joseph White; Editing by Ben Klayman and Lisa
Shumaker)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |