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🪵 Overyield’s Projections dashboards offer users both granular and high-level economic insights, from 30-year revenue forecasts to annual operations budgets. The following article highlights some of the key insights users will glean within their Projections dashboards.
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Contents
Projections
Your Projections dashboards synthesize all of your design data with all of your farm data, generating filterable graphs and figures that assist in planning your farm’s financial and operational activities.
- Once you’ve assembled a design prototype, all of the design decisions you’ve made (e.g. acreage, row count, tree count) work alongside your backend data— the agronomic, operational, and economic assumptions embedded within your crop templates— to ultimately inform your Projections.
- Users can view economic projections for their farm at any point during the design process. Simply toggle to
Economics
via your Design Page
- These projections are living: As you rightsize and customize your backend data and adjust your design, your projections will shift accordingly.
Summary
Your Summary dashboard presents your most important financial metrics in both a graphical and table format, filterable both by timeframe and crop type.
- Graphical representations of your gross income, cumulative profit, revenue, capital expenditures (capex), and operating expenditures (opex) help you understand your finances across varying time scales and crop types.
Clicking each metric will show/hide the curve on the graph.
- Additionally, tables containing your internal rate of return (IRR) and annual income statements serve as practical tools for understanding the financial viability of your farm.
Income statements can copied and pasted into a spreadsheet.
Yield
Your Yield dashboard illuminates various yield metrics as graphs and tables, filterable by specific years or by longer timeframes.
- The graph draws information from your design and your crop templates: data such as tree counts, loss events, yield per tree, and % target yield achieved per year work together to create a basic yield curve for every crop.
Yield curves are segmented by yield unit (e.g. timber crops, whose yields are measured in boardfeet, will not be viewable alongside fruit crops, whose yields are measured in weight)