4 Things to Do When Your Kids Come Home to Farm

Matt and Lisa Moreland (center) enacted a growth plan after learning all three of their sons decided to join their Oklahoma operation.
Matt and Lisa Moreland (center) enacted a growth plan after learning all three of their sons decided to join their Oklahoma operation.
(Moreland Family Photo)

Matt and Lisa Moreland hoped at least one of their sons would return to their farm based near Medford, Okla. What they didn’t anticipate was all three sons – James, Will and David – wanted to join the family business once they completed their college degrees. 

“It put me back on my heels. I thought, ‘Wow, we’re going to have to find a way to grow,’” Matt recalls. 

That was seven years ago. Here are four things Moreland says he has learned in the process.

1. DON’T SLICE YOUR “PIE” INTO SMALLER PIECES. Instead, make a bigger one. The Morelands have grown their operation to accommodate each son’s return. 

With James, they added an Angus cowherd. Will has taken the lead on all things agronomic on the farm, which grows corn, soybeans, winter wheat and cotton. David runs the excavation/construction side of the operation. 

Scaling up the faming enterprise as each son returned has enabled the Morelands to compensate them accordingly. “They also get an annual bonus and equity in the operation,” Matt says. 

2. LET YOUR LEADERS LEAD. “I quickly learned as we’ve grown there’s only so much I can do. I can guide, but I can’t be a control freak,” Moreland says. 

How that plays out: each son leads in their respective areas of expertise, and then he and the farm’s eight employees provide support as needed.

"We meet as a group every Monday morning to look at what needs to be done in the week ahead, make assignments and then modify them as necessary,” he says. 

Don’t underestimate the value of having clearly defined roles and accountability when children return to the farm, suggests Rena Striegel, president of Transition Point Business Advisors. 

“Create a template to delegate responsibility and build in accountability to develop the next generation of leaders,” she advises. 

3. CARVE OUT YOUR ROLE. Moreland functions as the managing partner in the operation, overseeing the cash flow for the farm as well as the big-picture direction for the operation. He also takes the lead on lender, landlord and Farm Service Agency (FSA) relationships. 

4. HARNESS HELP FROM EXPERTS TO CREATE PLANS. “The investment of good counsel is minimal compared to the cost of mistakes,” says Kitt Tovar Jensen, staff attorney at the Iowa State University Center for Agricultural Law and Taxation. 

Moreland knew, even with professional counsel, mistakes can be made. His solution: “Vet your plans with key individuals and organizations. For financial planning, you have to consider the accounting side of things as well as the legal components, and it can be challenging to understand what might work for the FSA, as well as for your accountant and even the IRS,” he says.

Some key questions Moreland asks of experts: What do you think of our plan? How can we make it better? What else should we do?


Take Control Of Your Succession Plan at the Top Producer Summit!

Date:  Monday, January 23, 2023
Time:  8:30 am - 4:30 pm
Cost: $219

Use the topics and tools included in The DIRTT Project to jump-start the succession planning process for your operation whether you are just beginning or need to get on track.

  • Learn how to set goals for both the transitioning owners and the operation.
  • Learn how to create a plan to ensure that your heirs and successors are ready to lead and work effectively together.
  • Learn how to address family disharmony or handle communication with successors who do not get along.
  • Learn how to choose your professional team and hold them accountable for the work they will be doing for you.
  • Network with and learn from other farmers in transition.

Learn more and register now!

 

If you are in the process of succession planning, be sure to check out the tools Farm Journal offers. To learn more, visit FarmJournalLegacyProject.com

Malecha Enterprises: 8 Core Values Bridge the Dynamics of Family and Business

How to Create a Short-Term Operating Plan for Your Farm

How to Make a Successful Transition to the Next Generation

Who Gets What? Take This Important Estate Planning Step

 

Latest News

How Much Upside is Left in the Wheat and Corn Markets?  Cattle Recover on Cash News
How Much Upside is Left in the Wheat and Corn Markets? Cattle Recover on Cash News

Grain and livestock close mixed Thursday. Alan Brugler, Brugler Marketing says wheat rallied for a 6th day pulling along corn and may still have some upside. Cattle recover with the help of better cash news.

University of Nebraska Professor Leads RNAi Research Targeting Western Corn Rootworm
University of Nebraska Professor Leads RNAi Research Targeting Western Corn Rootworm

Research underway at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln is showing promise by targeting western corn rootworm genes with RNAi technology.

Cattle Break Again on HPAI News: Corn Follows Wheat Higher, Soybeans Fall on Weak Exports
Cattle Break Again on HPAI News: Corn Follows Wheat Higher, Soybeans Fall on Weak Exports

Cattle futures plunge again on HPAI news but Scott Varilek, Kooima Kooima Varilek says cash is holding together. Hogs fall with cattle. Corn follows wheat but may not take out the top of the trading range.

DJI Launches New Ag Spray Drones
DJI Launches New Ag Spray Drones

Building on the Agras drone line, the T50 offers improved efficiency for larger-scale growing operations, while the lightweight T25 is designed to be more portable for smaller fields.

New Jersey Woman Receives Pig Kidney and Heart Pump in Groundbreaking Surgery
New Jersey Woman Receives Pig Kidney and Heart Pump in Groundbreaking Surgery

A New Jersey woman fighting for her life received an incredible gift from a pig last month at Massachusetts General Hospital. 

AgDay Markets Now: Darin Newsom Says Wheat Ends Higher but Grain Rally May be Losing Steam
AgDay Markets Now: Darin Newsom Says Wheat Ends Higher but Grain Rally May be Losing Steam

Wheat ends higher for a fifth day but Darin Newsom with Barchart thinks the rally has just about run its course and that is true for corn and soybeans as well. And HPAI headlines sink cattle...again.