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    The Workplace Report
    BPI Editorial · June 2, 2026

    Key Strategies for Effective Change Management in Farming: Insights from Jamie Sonneville

    By Best Practice Institute Editorial Staff
    Key Strategies for Effective Change Management in Farming: Insights from Jamie Sonneville

    Key Strategies for Effective Change Management in Farming: Insights from Jamie Sonneville

    In an ever-evolving agricultural landscape, effective change management is essential for farms that want to remain competitive, efficient, and resilient. Jamie Sonneville, a fifth-generation apple grower and the founder & CEO of Agri-Trak, brings more than 15 years of IT experience to the intersection of agriculture and technology. Based in Pultneyville/Williamson, NY, Sonneville leads a farm-management SaaS company that digitizes workforce production and tracking, helping farms replace pen-and-paper workflows with modern, data-driven processes. Her work has been featured in TechCrunch and RIT News, she was named to the Rochester Business Journal Forty Under 40 in 2021, and she appears on Inc.'s 2025 Female Founders 500.

    Understanding Change Management in Farming

    Change management in agriculture involves people, processes, and technology. It is the practice of guiding a farm through transitions—whether adopting a new digital tool, reorganizing labor workflows, or shifting to data-informed crop management—while minimizing disruption and maximizing adoption. For farms rooted in generational methods, successful change management respects tradition while building pathways to efficiency.

    1. Embrace Technology and Innovation

    Sonneville emphasizes that technology is not a replacement for farmers’ knowledge but an amplifier of it. Digital tools like Agri-Trak provide real-time workforce production and tracking, which reduces errors inherent to manual logs and frees up managers to focus on decision-making. Implementing technology can improve traceability, payroll accuracy, labor forecasting, and compliance documentation. The key is selecting tools that align with farm scale and workflows and that provide clear, demonstrable ROI.

    2. Engage Stakeholders Early and Often

    Early stakeholder engagement is critical. This means involving farm owners, managers, crew leaders, seasonal workers, and suppliers in planning and piloting changes. When stakeholders contribute to solution selection and configuration, they develop ownership and are more likely to adopt new practices. Jamie recommends structured feedback sessions and frontline-user interviews to uncover practical issues before a full rollout.

    3. Prioritize Training and Ongoing Support

    Adoption hinges on people feeling confident with new systems. Hands-on training, easy-to-access documentation, multilingual support where needed, and follow-up coaching sessions help close the knowledge gap. Agri-Trak’s approach focuses on practical training that mirrors daily tasks so workers can immediately apply what they learn. Ongoing support—rather than a single training event—ensures long-term adoption.

    4. Start Small with Pilot Programs

    Pilot programs reduce risk and build proof points. A small-scale pilot lets farm leaders test workflows, measure benefits, and refine processes before committing to full implementation. Pilots create internal champions whose positive experiences help persuade hesitant colleagues. Jamie advises choosing a representative field or crew for pilots to ensure learnings translate across operations.

    5. Measure, Iterate, and Celebrate Wins

    Data must drive the change process. Define clear metrics—labor hours per task, production per crew, error rates, time saved on paperwork—then track them before and after implementation. Use those metrics to iterate on workflows and to quantify benefits for stakeholders. Celebrating early wins reinforces positive momentum and demonstrates the value of change.

    6. Communicate a Clear Vision and Preserve Farm Culture

    Effective change management balances innovation with respect for farm culture. Communicate a clear vision that explains why changes matter for the farm’s future—improved profitability, compliance simplicity, or better worker conditions. Acknowledge traditions and involve family members and veteran workers in shaping how technology is used so that modernization complements, rather than erases, heritage.

    7. Lead with Empathy and Resilience

    Change can be stressful. Leaders should model patience, listen to concerns, and provide practical solutions. Jamie’s IT background informs her systematic approach, but her roots as a fifth-generation grower ground her in empathy for the rhythms of farm life. Resilient leadership weathers initial setbacks and keeps the team focused on long-term benefits.

    Conclusion

    Jamie Sonneville’s experience building Agri-Trak illustrates that successful change management in farming blends technology, people-focused processes, and iterative learning. Farms that engage stakeholders, invest in training, pilot thoughtfully, measure outcomes, and communicate transparently can accelerate adoption and realize meaningful operational gains while honoring their agricultural heritage.

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    Researched and edited by Best Practice Institute Editorial Staff. See our methodology. Originally syndicated from Visipage.

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