Customers Conversations
See how growers are protecting their crops with real-time disease alerts.

On making informed decisions, not just the right ones
"That's where CropVoice really comes into play. Not just if we need to act, but when. That's what I liked about it, right out of the gate in year one. It's helping us make more informed decisions on timely applications."
— Dylan Tacke
On why timing makes or breaks a fungicide application
"Timing is critical. If you're late, and I mean white mold already showing hair and veins late. You've essentially wasted $30 an acre. There's no recovering from that. Timing is huge."
— Chris & Devin

On simplicity and ROI
"If there's a way we can hold back on a $15–$20 an acre fungicide application and put that towards the bottom line, we don't want to be guessing. That's what CropVoice does, it takes the guesswork out of it."
— Dylan Tacke

On the real-world yield impact
"I was sitting around 75 bushels, and he was at 86 or 87. That told me one thing; what we did there worked. All said and done, that bottom 40 acres mapped out at 86 bushels. A mile north where we didn't treat, those fields were in the 50s to low 60s. Bottom ground is tough to map with all the valleys, but the drop-off was dramatic. At least 25 bushels difference! It was crazy."
— Aidan Kleinschmit

On acting fast when disease hit the county
"It was a Saturday night when I got word that disease had been found in the county. I already knew there was an infected plot about three miles from a couple of my fields, so that Monday morning I was out there spraying beans. The fact that I could get it sprayed within two days' notice — I really liked that."
— Aidan Kleinschmit

On the quality of scouting reports
"The scouting reports were informative. They did a good job breaking things down; especially with disease. You can get a lot of very technical, scientific language, but they did a good job explaining what they found and rating the severity — high risk, low risk."
— Aidan Kleinschmit

On the real-world yield impact
"I was sitting around 75 bushels, and he was at 86 or 87. That told me one thing; what we did there worked. All said and done, that bottom 40 acres mapped out at 86 bushels. A mile north where we didn't treat, those fields were in the 50s to low 60s. Bottom ground is tough to map with all the valleys, but the drop-off was dramatic. At least 25 bushels difference! It was crazy."
— Aidan Kleinschmit

On acting fast when disease hit the county
"It was a Saturday night when I got word that disease had been found in the county. I already knew there was an infected plot about three miles from a couple of my fields, so that Monday morning I was out there spraying beans. The fact that I could get it sprayed within two days' notice — I really liked that."
— Aidan Kleinschmit

On the quality of scouting reports
"The scouting reports were informative. They did a good job breaking things down; especially with disease. You can get a lot of very technical, scientific language, but they did a good job explaining what they found and rating the severity — high risk, low risk."
— Aidan Kleinschmit