Feedstuffs Pork Nation

Decision-making, or lack thereof, can impact profitability

20 min · 30. Mai 2025
Episode Decision-making, or lack thereof, can impact profitability Cover

Beschreibung

Indecision in the pork industry is rooted in companies pushing products rather than providing solutions. The truth of the matter is that organizational engagement begins with customer engagement and that results from great technology resulting from great research delivered in a relevant and compelling manner. In today's Feedstuffs Pork Nation, hosts Mark Hulsebus of Alltech and Sarah Muirhead are joined by Ernie Hansen, manager of swine nutrition and technical services at Hubbard Feeds, to talk about how decision-making is often times tied to profitability.  Feedstuffs Pork Nation is brought to you by Alltech. Alltech delivers smarter, more sustainable solutions for agriculture through a diverse portfolio of products and services. Contact the Alltech Pork Team or visit go.alltech.com/swine-research [http://www.go.alltech.com/swine-research] to learn more.

Kommentare

0

Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert

Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der Feedstuffs Pork Nation-Community!

Loslegen

2 Monate für 1 €

Dann 4,99 € / Monat · Jederzeit kündbar.

  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo
  • 20 Stunden Hörbücher / Monat
  • Alle kostenlosen Podcasts

Alle Folgen

17 Folgen

Episode Pig livability: Metric that drives everything else Cover

Pig livability: Metric that drives everything else

Keeping pigs alive sounds basic, but it may be the most powerful strategy you have for improving swine profitability and sustainability at the same time. From World Pork Expo, we sit down with Alltech’s Dr. Jose Soto to unpack why livability is the metric that quietly drives everything else: feed efficiency, growth performance, cost of production, and the stability of your whole pork production system. We dig into Olerix, Alltech’s new proprietary blend of essential oils, and what the team is seeing around repeatable improvements in performance and, most importantly, survivability. Then we zoom out to the “Planet of Plenty” idea and ask what it looks like when you stop managing pork production as a set of isolated KPIs and start managing for throughput. When more pigs make it to market, the same labor and the same high-priced inputs generate more pounds of pork, which changes your economics fast. The conversation also stretches beyond the barn. We talk about the National Pork Board partnership and the “Beyond the Pork Chop” seminar, where carcass utilization, pork fabrication, and changing global consumer demographics become part of the same story. Better use of the entire pork carcass can raise value per animal and reduce waste, while better feed efficiency helps reduce the carbon footprint tied to feed, one of the biggest sustainability drivers in swine. If you care about swine nutrition, essential oils, feed conversion, livability, pork sustainability, and real-world farm margins, this one connects the dots. Subscribe, share this with a producer or nutritionist who’s fighting input costs, and leave a review with your biggest throughput question.

16. Juni 202615 min
Episode Pork well positioned despite global storm Cover

Pork well positioned despite global storm

Prices are whipsawing, headlines scream chaos, and yet the U.S. pork complex feels…steady. We sit down with Joe Kerns to unpack this uncommon calm and why discipline—not luck—may be the quiet engine behind today’s positive forward curve. From high interest rates and soaring barn costs to the hard lesson of not overwhelming shackle space, we trace how a painful 2023 forced better habits that are now paying off. We dig into the protein stack. Beef is pinned by biology and a slow rebuild, keeping ground prices elevated for years ahead. Poultry can add birds quickly but still faces operational limits. That leaves pork with a strategic window to win share through innovation: smarter fabrication, retailer-friendly ground blends, and cuts sized for air fryers, slow cookers, and weeknight routines. Kerns shares what he learned at a carcass innovation session—from fiber and fat to flavor systems—and why tenderloin quietly delivers best-in-basket value without sacrificing taste. Exports and crops get equal airtime. A softer dollar helps competitiveness, Europe has hamstrung itself, and Brazil remains a tantalizing wildcard with real financing constraints. On the row crop side, China’s absence for soybeans looms large, pointing toward heavy carryout and the need to re-center soybean meal in livestock rations as a domestic demand anchor. We challenge the hype around renewable diesel, biodiesel, and a fast E15 jump, outlining why infrastructure and economics still don’t pencil. Then we level-set risks: ASF as the border-closing shock, aging consumers who eat less meat, and growth across Africa that demands fit-for-market products. This conversation is a playbook for staying disciplined while capturing upside: hedge inputs and hogs, align cuts with how people actually cook, and use beef’s price era to reset pork’s value story without overbuilding. If you found these insights useful, follow the show, share it with a producer or buyer who’d value the data behind the decisions, and leave a quick review to help more listeners find us. Your hosts for Feedstuffs Pork Nation are Mark Hulsebus of Alltech and Feedstuffs' Sarah Muirhead.

16. Okt. 202527 min
Episode Navigating policy pressures in modern pork production Cover

Navigating policy pressures in modern pork production

The complex challenges facing U.S. pork producers take center stage as Bryan Humphreys, CEO of the National Pork Producers Council, joins Feedstuffs Pork Nation to tackle the industry's most pressing issues head-on. Humphreys delivers a comprehensive assessment of what has been termed "Farm Bill 1.0," celebrating wins like $70 million for the National Animal Health Laboratory Network and vital tax provision extensions while acknowledging a critical omission – a solution to California's Proposition 12. This legislation creates what Humphreys describes as a "monumental threat" by allowing states to regulate production practices beyond their borders. "California is not just dictating to Iowa, they're dictating to our friends and colleagues up in Canada and in Mexico," he explains, highlighting the international ramifications often overlooked in policy discussions. The conversation shifts to nutrition policy as Humphreys addresses concerns about potential classifications of pork products as "ultra-processed" foods under health initiatives. "You cannot put sausage or pork chops in those same categories," he asserts, positioning U.S. pork as a nutrient-dense protein essential to balanced diets. Trade opportunities and challenges receive equal attention, with Humphreys noting that 25-30% of U.S. pork is exported, creating markets for cuts less favored domestically while ensuring Americans have access to preferred products like bacon. Vietnam and parts of Southeast Asia, Central, and South America represent key target markets where affordable protein is in high demand. Perhaps most pressing is the labor crisis affecting rural America, where some agricultural counties face unemployment rates below 2.5%. Despite offering jobs in communities with excellent schools and quality of life, producers struggle to find workers. Humphreys makes a compelling case for agricultural workforce solutions while closing with a passionate call for industry engagement: "Agriculture is an outstanding group of individuals, but we could certainly use everyone's voice in DC." His message is clear – the future of American pork production depends on producers speaking up and making their voices heard where policy decisions are made.  Feedstuffs Pork Nation is hosted by Mark Hulsebus of Alltech and Sarah Muirhead of Feedstuffs.

22. Aug. 202519 min
Episode Coalition building a must for effective communication of animal agriculture's messages Cover

Coalition building a must for effective communication of animal agriculture's messages

The complex dance between community action, government directives, and public health creates the foundation for meaningful social change.  Hosts for this episode are Mark Hulsebus of Alltech and Sarah Muirhead of Farm Progress. They are joined by Kylee Deniz of the Oklahoma Pork Producers Council. They dive deep into the power of directives and how they shape public response. There's always tension between top-down mandates and grassroots movements, with the most successful initiatives finding ways to honor both perspectives.  Community decision-making processes receive significant attention throughout the discussion. How do communities navigate complex issues when faced with opposing viewpoints? Effective decisions require transparent information sharing, inclusive processes, and recognition of economic factors influencing outcomes. Public health services must be deeply integrated within community structures, balancing scientific expertise with community values to create approaches that are both evidence-based and culturally relevant. Building effective coalitions across different sectors proves vital for addressing complex social issues. By bringing together government agencies, corporate partners, and community organizations, we create comprehensive solutions no single entity could achieve alone. The concept of "third spaces" – where diverse stakeholders can engage in meaningful dialogue – offers promising pathways forward, especially when communities face seemingly impossible constraints. Join us for this thought-provoking exploration of how we can work together to build stronger, more resilient communities through thoughtful collaboration and creative problem-solving. Share your own experiences with community coalition-building or public health initiatives – we'd love to hear your perspective!

26. Juni 202513 min
Episode Decision-making, or lack thereof, can impact profitability Cover

Decision-making, or lack thereof, can impact profitability

Indecision in the pork industry is rooted in companies pushing products rather than providing solutions. The truth of the matter is that organizational engagement begins with customer engagement and that results from great technology resulting from great research delivered in a relevant and compelling manner. In today's Feedstuffs Pork Nation, hosts Mark Hulsebus of Alltech and Sarah Muirhead are joined by Ernie Hansen, manager of swine nutrition and technical services at Hubbard Feeds, to talk about how decision-making is often times tied to profitability.  Feedstuffs Pork Nation is brought to you by Alltech. Alltech delivers smarter, more sustainable solutions for agriculture through a diverse portfolio of products and services. Contact the Alltech Pork Team or visit go.alltech.com/swine-research [http://www.go.alltech.com/swine-research] to learn more.

30. Mai 202520 min