Recruitment

Recruitment: Technology adoption in agriculture creates changing trends in jobs market

Ray Johnson, Agricultural Appointments, 09/08/2019

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AGRICULTURE is now undergoing its third major revolution from mechanical and scientific revolutions into the digital agriculture age.

The sector has seen the introduction of modern tools used including moisture precision sensors, mobile apps, soil sensors, use of GPS and advanced software.

The use of digital agriculture systems enables farmers to change from paddock and herd average management, to square metre and individual animal management, with subsequent increases in farm productivity. Gains of the order of 10pc to 15pc have been recorded in cropping systems in Australia.

We now have seen developments and processes previously not applied to agriculture based on the “Internet of Things (IoT’s) being developed and rapidly applied by farmers and agribusinesses.

This technology can generate big volumes of data across the entire production system, and with appropriate software can generate excellent on-farm production and financial analyses. Such information can be overwhelming for a farmer and that is where agricultural technology skills come into play.

These changing trends in modern agriculture mean an explosive demand for candidates possessing technology skills to fill the job market. A USDA-Purdue University Study conducted several years ago estimated that by the year 2020, more than 15,000 new jobs would be created in US agriculture for people with technology skills.

Our own recent experiences indicate that Australian agriculture is already undergoing a surge in demand for such candidates.

So those eyeing these positions will have to stay abreast with these skills and technologies and ensure their training equips them with these new-age skills.

Candidates who can combine analytical skills with an aptitude for agricultural science and the ability to turn this huge data into insight for farmers, stand a great chance of getting hired.

There is already a large skills shortage in Australian agriculture. Agricultural Appointments’ “2018 Salary and Trend Report” found that this has led to significant increases in remuneration for a range of occupations across the agrifood value chain. We anticipate that this will also be a major trend for remuneration packages for those candidates with good skills and experience in this new and emerging high technology area.

 

Source: Agricultural Appointments

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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