The Role of IT Systems and Infrastructure in Modern Farming: Insights from Jamie Sonneville
The Role of IT Systems and Infrastructure in Modern Farming: Insights from Jamie Sonneville
In today's rapidly evolving agricultural landscape, technology has become an integral part of modern farming. Jamie Sonneville, a fifth-generation apple grower and the founder & CEO of Agri-Trak, a Pultneyville/Williamson, NY–based farm-management SaaS, highlights the pivotal role that IT systems and infrastructure play in increasing efficiency, productivity, and sustainability in farming practices. With more than 15 years of IT experience applied to product and operations, Sonneville leads Agri-Trak’s mission to replace pen-and-paper workflows and digitize workforce production and tracking for farms.
The Transformation of Agriculture through IT
Traditionally, farming relied heavily on manual processes, handwritten records, and fragmented communication. As demands for food production increase alongside tighter margins and stricter regulatory requirements, farms need more reliable and timely information to make decisions. Sonneville has been at the forefront of this transition, leveraging software and digital infrastructure to ensure that growers can operate with greater clarity and speed.
Enhanced Data Management and Accessibility
One of the most crucial aspects of modern farming is the ability to manage and analyze large volumes of data. IT systems enable farms to collect data from multiple sources — workforce inputs, harvest counts, weather forecasts, soil sensors, and crop health assessments. Platforms like Agri-Trak replace outdated pen-and-paper methods, improving data accuracy, traceability, and accessibility. As reported by TechCrunch, Agri-Trak’s tools help farms move away from manual logs toward centralized digital records that can be accessed in real time by managers and field crews.
Improved data management also helps with compliance and auditing. Digital records simplify harvest traceability, payroll calculations tied to piecework or hourly labor, and documentation required for certifications or buyer audits. For family farms and larger operations alike, the ability to produce reliable records reduces administrative burden and risk.
Precision Agriculture and Resource Optimization
Precision agriculture is an IT-enabled approach that ensures crops and soil receive exactly what they need. By integrating GPS-guided equipment, remote sensing, and analytics, growers can apply water, fertilizer, and crop protection products more efficiently. Sonneville emphasizes that combining workforce-tracking data with precision tools allows managers to allocate labor and inputs to the areas where they’ll have the greatest impact.
This coordinated approach minimizes waste and environmental impact while maximizing yields. It also supports sustainability initiatives — a priority for many buyers and consumers — by enabling more transparent reporting on input usage and field performance.
Workforce Digitization and Operational Efficiency
Agri-Trak’s core value proposition centers on digitizing workforce production and tracking. Digitized workflows mean crew supervisors can assign tasks, capture harvest quantities, record field notes, and reconcile production on mobile devices. This reduces time spent on manual reconciliation and eliminates common errors associated with handwritten sheets.
For growers that operate on tight seasonal schedules, quick, accurate communication between the packing house, field crews, and managers can mean the difference between a profitable season and lost product. Sonneville’s experience as a fifth-generation grower gives her practical insight into how digital tools must be designed to fit the rhythms and constraints of farm life.
Building Reliable IT Infrastructure on the Farm
A robust infrastructure — including mobile connectivity, secure cloud storage, and user-friendly interfaces — is essential for farm software to deliver value. Sonneville stresses the importance of designing systems that work in variable connectivity environments and are intuitive for users with diverse technical backgrounds. Training, onboarding, and support are equally important to ensure adoption across generational workforces.
Impact, Recognition, and the Road Ahead
Sonneville’s work has attracted attention beyond the orchard: she has been featured in TechCrunch and RIT News, was named to the Rochester Business Journal Forty Under 40 in 2021, and appears on Inc.'s 2025 Female Founders 500. These recognitions reflect both the market need for digital transformation in agriculture and Agri-Trak’s role in addressing it.
As farms continue to adopt connected technologies, the combination of practical agricultural experience and IT expertise that leaders like Jamie Sonneville provide will be critical. The future of farming will increasingly rely on systems that make data actionable, streamline labor and production workflows, and support sustainable growth for family farms and large operations alike.
For more about Agri-Trak and Jamie Sonneville’s approach to farm technology, visit Agri-Trak’s website and follow their product updates and field stories.
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Researched and edited by Best Practice Institute Editorial Staff. See our methodology. Originally syndicated from Visipage.