Meet the Iowa Farm Family Named 2021 Top Producer of the Year

Winter at LongView Farms in Nevada, Iowa is the perfect time for planning next season. 

“When I use the word ‘sustainable’, you have to keep your revenues going at least as fast as your expenses are growing,” says Steve Henry, one of the owners and operators of LongView Farms. “So, the definition for sustainability is, can I be here again next year?”

Together with his wife Laurie and sons Scott and Eric, Steve Henry and team have built a sustainable business that now stretches across 10,000 acres and a couple of livestock feeding ventures. 

“One of the things I learned through my career before I came back to the farm was the importance of understanding the finances of the farm,” says Steve.

Steve and Laurie came back to operation in 1988 after a short stint working in ag lending in Nebraska.

“It came together for us,” says Laurie Henry.  “We came back. We were excited. It was a way to think about starting a family. I was able to work off the farm as Steve and his dad were starting to work together.”

“Fortunately, my career was in ag lending and I got to see so many different models of success,” says Steve. “I was also able to see things that didn't necessarily turn out the way that those farmers wanted and it was just an opportunity to grow. We need those kinds of opportunities to grow.”

And growth is what they’ve done. In 2012 the farm was renamed LongView and in 2017 they completed a transition plan adding their sons Scott and Eric as partners. 

“It allows Scott and Eric to have more of an impact on the decision making while they're still in their late 20s, as opposed to waiting until mom and dad die,” says Steve.

“That ownership is key because ultimately, it's not just something that's given, says Scott Henry. “It's something that's also earned. One of the things that I don't give my parents a ton of credit for is they've always said we want the next generation to feel a part of what we're doing and that their opinion is valued.”

Today as the operation plans for the future, previous models built on land acquisition are transitioning in search of added value. 

“We need to be looking beyond agriculture and how can we be sustainable in a period where Iowa may not always be corn and beans,” adds Laurie.

“I've really focused on how can we continue to not only grow in acreage but diversify, and just the business elements of what we're doing, whether that's introducing livestock, looking at different partnerships,” says Scott. “We've tried indoor farming, for example.”

New areas of leadership are sprouting for both the business and their community. 

“When I think about community impact, I don't think just about what the Henry family does for the community of Nevada or Storey County,” says Scott. “But I also think about what our team members are doing or able to do.  And part of that is making sure that they're compensated in a way that they feel like they have the capacity to do some of that themselves, as well.”

As the planning continues for 2021 and beyond, the next 5 years are already stacking up to be different. 

“Laura and I are no longer the majority owners,” says Steve. “Scott and Eric will have the leadership of it."

“The mantra of our business, LongView Farms, is honoring the past, stewarding the present and looking to the future,” says Eric.


Congratulations to the Henry family and LongView Farms, the 2021 Top Producer of the Year. Meet the other finalists:

DX Ranch, Gettysburg, S.D.

Came Farms, Salina, Kan.


Sponsored by BASF and Case IH, the Top Producer of the Year contest began in 2000 and represents the best in the business of farming. Three finalists are chosen from numerous applications by a panel of judges based on entrepreneurial originality; financial and business progress; and industry and community leadership. 

The three finalists received all-expense-paid trips to attend the Summit. The winner also receives sessions with a CEO coach, courtesy of BASF, and the lease of a Case IH tractor for 150 hours of use on their farm. 

For 2021, the Top Producer Summit will feature both a small in-person event, which was held Feb. 15-17 in Nashville, Tenn. An online program launches Feb. 23-25. With the theme, “Breaking New Ground,” producers will hone their money, marketing and management skills.

Learn more about Top Producer Summit at TPSummit.com. Sponsors include:

  • Presenting: BASF, Beck’s Case IH, Nutrien, Farmers Mutual Hail, Fendt, Indigo, Pioneer and Pivot Bio
  • Supporting: AgCredit, CLA, Lincoln Financial Network 

The online Top Producer Summit, happening Feb. 23-25, will feature 25 sessions (ranging in length from 30 min. to 1 hour). Several recorded sessions from the in-person event will also be featured. Just a few of the online speakers include:

  • Eric Snodgrass, Nutrien Ag Solutions
  • John Phipps, Top Producer Columnist
  • Dr. Temple Grandin, Colorado State University 
  • Esther George, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City
  • Seth Meyer, USDA Chief Economist
  • Angie Setzer, Citizen's Grain
  • Stephen Nicholson, RaboResearch Grains

The registration fee is $125. To receive 50% off, use the code: TPS50

Register now!

 

Latest News

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.

Canadian Competition Bureau Has Major Concerns About Proposed Bunge/Viterra Merger
Canadian Competition Bureau Has Major Concerns About Proposed Bunge/Viterra Merger

Canada’s Competition Bureau said it had identified major competition concerns around the proposed merger between U.S. grains merchant Bunge and Glencore-backed Viterra.

Wheat Higher for Fifth Day, While Corn and Soybeans Take a Break from the Rally: Livestock Fall
Wheat Higher for Fifth Day, While Corn and Soybeans Take a Break from the Rally: Livestock Fall

Grains end mixed with wheat higher for the fifth consecutive day. However, corn and soybeans don't follow. Darin Newsom, Barchart, discusses if the fund short covering rally is about done?

Properly Prepared Beef Remains Safe; Meat Institute Calls For Guidance to Protect Workers at Beef Facilities
Properly Prepared Beef Remains Safe; Meat Institute Calls For Guidance to Protect Workers at Beef Facilities

The Meat Institute said properly prepared beef remains safe to eat and called for USDA and the CDC to provide worker safety guidance specific to beef processors to ensure workers are protected from infection.

RhizeBio’s Doug Toal Talks Soil Microbiology, Ag Entrepreneurship With Top Producer
RhizeBio’s Doug Toal Talks Soil Microbiology, Ag Entrepreneurship With Top Producer

RhizeBio cofounder Doug Tole joins host Paul Neiffer for Episode 143 of the Top Producer Podcast.

 A Message to the Ag Industry about H5N1
A Message to the Ag Industry about H5N1

The livestock industry needs a comprehensive, cohesive plan to address the virus. Producers, their employees and veterinarians need clear answers and support from U.S. agricultural leadership, moving forward.