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PROFITABILITY GUIDE · 2026

Dairy Farm Profitability Pakistan — How to Maximise Profit Per Cow

A data-driven 2026 guide covering IOFC, calving interval economics, SCC quality premiums, feed optimisation, value addition, and a 10-year financial model — for 10 to 100-cow Pakistani dairy farms.

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"A well-managed 50-cow dairy farm in Pakistan generates Rs 2–4 lakh net monthly profit in 2026. The three biggest profit levers are: IOFC (Income Over Feed Cost) above Rs 100/cow/day, calving interval below 14 months, and SCC below 200,000 cells/mL. Data-driven farms outperform unmanaged farms by 30–40%."

— HerdManager.co Editorial Team

Is Pakistani Dairy Farming Profitable in 2026?

Yes — but only with disciplined management. Pakistan is the 4th largest milk producer globally, with a Rs 1.5 trillion dairy industry. Less than 4% of milk is formally processed, creating a massive opportunity for producers who track their numbers.

Rs 2–4 lakh50-cow net/month
Rs 100+IOFC target/cow/day
18–25%Annual ROI
3–5 yrsPayback period
40%Top vs bottom quartile gap

4th Largest Milk Producer Globally

Pakistan produces over 65 billion litres of milk per year. The domestic market is growing at 4–5% annually, outpacing supply growth — meaning farmgate prices remain firm.

Rs 1.5 Trillion Industry

Dairy contributes more to Pakistan's agricultural GDP than wheat, rice, or cotton. Despite this scale, the majority of farms are unmanaged — creating a 30–40% performance gap between data-driven and traditional farms.

<4% Formally Processed

Less than 4% of Pakistan's milk enters formal processing channels (UHT, pasteurised, ghee plants). This creates strong direct-to-consumer and local market demand — and premium pricing for quality producers.

Data-Driven Farms Win

Farms that track IOFC, calving interval, and SCC outperform unmanaged farms by 30–40% in net profit per cow per year. Record-keeping is not overhead — it is the highest-return investment on any dairy farm.

The Three Profit Levers

Every rupee of dairy farm profit comes down to three metrics. Master all three and you will be in the top quartile of Pakistani dairy farmers.

LEVER 1

Feed Efficiency (IOFC)

What it is: Income Over Feed Cost — milk revenue minus daily feed cost per cow.

Good number: Rs 100–120/cow/day. Rs 120+ = excellent. Rs 60 = break-even.

Bad number costs you: A farm stuck at Rs 60 IOFC vs Rs 100 loses Rs 40/cow/day — Rs 73,000/cow/year on a 50-cow herd that is Rs 36.5 lakh/year left on the table.

How to improve: Optimise TMR ration, grow own fodder (silage), breed for higher ECM yield, reduce SCC.

LEVER 2

Reproductive Performance (CI)

What it is: Calving Interval — the number of months between two successive calvings. Drives lactation frequency and calf output.

Good number: 12–13 months CI. Conception rate above 50%. Voluntary waiting period 45–60 days.

Bad number costs you: Every extra month of CI = Rs 8,000–12,000/cow in lost milk and delayed calf income. A 16-month CI herd pays Rs 3–6 lakh/year more than a 13-month CI herd.

How to improve: Improve heat detection accuracy, use Ovsynch for problem breeders, ensure energy balance post-calving.

LEVER 3

Milk Quality (SCC)

What it is: Somatic Cell Count — a direct measure of udder health and milk quality. Processors and premium buyers pay by SCC band.

Good number: Below 200,000 cells/mL. Below 100,000 = elite. Above 400,000 = penalty or rejection.

Bad number costs you: High SCC reduces yield by 5–15%, triggers mastitis treatment costs of Rs 15,000–25,000/case, and forfeits quality premium of Rs 5–10/litre.

How to improve: Post-milking teat dip, dry-cow therapy, regular equipment maintenance, cull chronic SCC animals.

Profit Per Cow Deep Dive

The gap between a low-performing and top-performing cow is staggering. Here is what the numbers look like in 2026 Pakistan dairy conditions.

Metric Low Performer
12 L/day
Average
20 L/day
Top Performer
28 L/day
Monthly milk revenue Rs 39,600 Rs 66,000 Rs 92,400
Feed cost/month Rs 18,000 Rs 24,000 Rs 30,000
Labor + vet + misc Rs 5,000 Rs 5,000 Rs 5,000
Amortization/month Rs 3,000 Rs 3,000 Rs 3,000
Net profit/cow/month Rs 13,600 Rs 34,000 Rs 54,400
Net profit/cow/year Rs 1.63 lakh Rs 4.08 lakh Rs 6.53 lakh

Assumptions: milk price Rs 110/litre, 30 milking days/month, farm-gate direct sales. Revenue excludes calf income.

Key Insight

Moving one cow from low-performer (12L) to average (20L) is worth Rs 2.45 lakh/cow/year. On a 50-cow herd where 20 cows are underperforming, that is Rs 49 lakh/year in recoverable profit — without adding a single animal.

IOFC: The Most Important KPI in Dairy

Income Over Feed Cost (IOFC) is the single most powerful metric for managing dairy farm profitability day to day. Here is everything you need to know.

Definition & Formula

IOFC measures how much money remains after feeding each cow, before other costs.

IOFC = (Daily litres × Rs/litre) − Daily feed cost

Example: Cow yields 22 litres at Rs 110 = Rs 2,420 revenue. Feed cost Rs 750/day. IOFC = Rs 1,670/day = Rs 55.7/cow/day.

Calculate for each cow weekly. Herd average below Rs 80 means your ration is wrong or your yield is too low.

IOFC Benchmark Ranges (2026)

Below Rs 60/cow/day — Break-Even Zone

Not covering overhead, labor, or amortization. Immediate ration review required.

Rs 60–80/cow/day — Marginal

Covering feed only. Thin margins. Look for feed cost reduction or yield improvement.

Rs 80–100/cow/day — Good

Covering all costs with profit. Benchmark for a well-managed commercial farm.

Rs 120+/cow/day — Excellent

Top-quartile performance. Strong genetics, optimised ration, and quality milk premium contributing.

Seasonal IOFC Variation in Pakistan

IOFC fluctuates significantly through the year. Understanding seasonal patterns protects profit.

Winter (Dec–Feb)

Rs 100–130

Best: low heat stress, berseem/oats cheap, high yield

Spring (Mar–Apr)

Rs 90–110

Transition fodder; watch bloat on lush green grass

Summer (May–Sep)

Rs 60–80

Heat stress drops yield; silage & cooling critical

Autumn (Oct–Nov)

Rs 85–105

Recovery period; reintroduce concentrates gradually

Reproductive Efficiency & Profitability

Calving interval is the most underestimated profit driver on Pakistani dairy farms. Every month counts — literally.

Calving Interval Lactations / 5 years Annual milk days Annual calves Annual cost vs 12-month CI 50-cow herd annual loss
12 months (target) 5.0 305 1.00 Baseline
14 months 4.3 262 0.86 Rs 16,000–24,000/cow Rs 8–12 lakh
16 months 3.75 228 0.75 Rs 32,000–48,000/cow Rs 16–24 lakh

Heat Detection — The Bottleneck

Most Pakistani farms detect fewer than 50% of heats visually. A well-trained farm worker with tail chalk and twice-daily observation can reach 70–80%. AI submission rate is the biggest driver of CI improvement.

Ovsynch Protocol ROI

An Ovsynch protocol costs Rs 1,200–1,800/cow in GnRH and PGF2α. It reliably delivers conception rates of 45–55% in cows that have failed 2+ natural heats. ROI is positive within the first pregnancy it achieves.

Voluntary Waiting Period

Do not breed cows before 45 days post-calving. The uterus needs time to involute. Breeding before VWP reduces conception rate to below 30% and wastes semen. Use HerdManager.co calving alerts to track VWP automatically.

Energy Balance Post-Calving

Cows in severe negative energy balance (NEBAL) after calving take longer to return to cyclicity. Avoid over-conditioning at dry-off (BCS 3.5 max), transition feed 3 weeks pre-calving, and push energy intake week 2 post-calving.

Milk Quality Premium — The Hidden Profit

Milk quality affects your price per litre, your mastitis cost, and your access to processor contracts. Most Pakistani farmers leave this money on the table.

SCC Pricing Tiers (2026 Pakistan)

SCC (cells/mL) Price Effect Annual Impact (50 cows)
<100,000 (Elite) +Rs 10/litre premium +Rs 33 lakh/year
100,000–200,000 (Good) +Rs 5/litre premium +Rs 16.5 lakh/year
200,000–400,000 (Average) Baseline (no premium) Baseline
>400,000 (Penalty) −Rs 5–15/litre penalty −Rs 16–49 lakh/year

Based on 20L/cow/day, 300 milking days, 50-cow herd. Processor pricing varies.

Mastitis Cost Calculator

A single clinical mastitis case costs Rs 15,000–25,000 in Pakistan — often invisible to farmers who don't track it.

Treatment drugs (antibiotics, NSAIDs) Rs 3,000–5,000
Discarded milk (7–10 days withdrawal) Rs 6,000–8,000
Yield loss for remainder of lactation Rs 4,000–8,000
Vet visit fee Rs 1,500–3,000
Total per clinical case Rs 14,500–24,000

A 50-cow herd averaging 2 clinical cases/cow/year spends Rs 15–24 lakh on mastitis alone. Preventing 50% of cases via post-dip and dry-cow therapy saves Rs 7.5–12 lakh/year.

SCC Improvement 6-Month Roadmap

Month 1–2: Baseline

Test individual cow SCC. Identify chronic high-SCC cows. Inspect milking machine vacuum and pulsation. Audit teat-dipping compliance.

Month 3–4: Intervene

Implement post-dip 100% compliance. Dry-cow therapy for all cows drying off. Treat or cull cows SCC >800K. Sanitise milking equipment daily.

Month 5–6: Maintain

Retest all cows. Target herd average below 200K. Set up HerdManager.co SCC alerts. Lock in quality premium with processor or direct buyer.

Feed Cost Optimisation

Feed is 60–70% of all operating costs on a Pakistani dairy farm. It is where most profit is made or destroyed. Here is how to manage it systematically.

Cost Per Litre by Ration Type

Ration Strategy Feed cost/litre IOFC estimate
Purchased fodder only Rs 60–75/L Rs 35–50
Bought fodder + concentrate Rs 45–60/L Rs 50–65
TMR (all purchased) Rs 38–50/L Rs 60–80
TMR + own silage Rs 28–38/L Rs 80–110
TMR + own silage + grazing Rs 20–30/L Rs 95–130

Key Feed Cost Reduction Strategies

Grow Own Fodder

Plant maize silage (July sow, Oct harvest), oats/berseem (Oct–Mar), Napier grass perennial. Own fodder cuts feed cost/litre by 20–35%.

Buy Concentrate in Bulk

Binola khal, sarson khal, wheat bran bought quarterly or at harvest saves 12–18% vs monthly retail purchasing.

TMR to Reduce Waste

TMR (Total Mixed Ration) eliminates selective eating and reduces feed waste from 15–20% to below 5%. ROI positive at 20+ cows.

Ration by Lactation Stage

Feed peak-lactation cows differently from mid and late. Dry cows on forage only. Reduces concentrate overuse by 15–20%.

Track IOFC Weekly

Weekly IOFC tracking catches feed cost spikes before they become monthly losses. HerdManager.co automates the calculation.

Herd Improvement Strategy

Genetic improvement is a multi-year investment but the highest long-term ROI available to a dairy farmer. Here is how to do it systematically in Pakistan.

AI with High-PW Semen

Use semen from bulls with high Production Worth (PW) index. One AI dose (Rs 1,500–3,000) upgrades the entire progeny. Request bull proof sheets from your AI provider and select bulls with positive daughter yield and fat% deviation.

F1 Crossbreeding Programme

F1 Sahiwal×HF crossbreds are the gold standard for Pakistani conditions — yielding 18–26 L/day with 30–40% lower cooling and health costs vs pure HF. Use HF semen on Sahiwal females; the F1 daughter keeps Sahiwal's heat tolerance and HF's yield genes.

Culling Protocol

Cull the bottom 10% of the herd each year by combined SCC and yield score. A cow in her 3rd+ lactation with chronic SCC above 400K and yield below 15L/day is costing more in feed and treatment than she returns. Replace with a well-bred heifer.

Heifer Development Programme

Your heifers are your next lactation's profit engine. Invest in them.

Birth–2 months

4L colostrum first 6h. Milk replacer or cow milk 8–10% body weight/day. Creep starter feed from week 2.

2–6 months

Weaned. ADG target 700–850g/day. High-quality hay + grower concentrate. Vaccinate FMD, LSD.

6–15 months

Forage-based growing diet. Target 350–380kg body weight at first service. Avoid over-conditioning (BCS max 3).

15–24 months

First service at 15 months. Target first calving at 24 months — adds one full lactation vs 30-month calving.

Scale Economics — Why Size Matters

A 50-cow farm is not just 5× a 10-cow farm. It is fundamentally more profitable per cow. Here is the math.

Fixed Cost Item 10 cows
Cost/cow/month
25 cows
Cost/cow/month
50 cows
Cost/cow/month
100 cows
Cost/cow/month
Labor (1 worker per farm) Rs 4,000 Rs 1,600 Rs 800 Rs 600
Vet visit (monthly) Rs 1,500 Rs 600 Rs 300 Rs 150
Equipment amortization Rs 2,500 Rs 1,200 Rs 700 Rs 450
Total fixed cost/cow/month Rs 8,000 Rs 3,400 Rs 1,800 Rs 1,200

Bulk Feed Buying Discount

A 50-cow farm buys 3–4 tonnes of concentrate per month — enough to negotiate a 10–15% bulk discount vs a 10-cow farm buying 600kg/month. At Rs 60,000/tonne concentrate, that is Rs 18,000–30,000/month saved.

Processor Contract Access

Most processors (Nestle, Engro, Haleeb) require minimum 300–500 litres/day to offer direct farm contracts with quality premiums. A 50-cow average-yield herd typically produces 1,000 L/day — enough for direct contract terms.

Scale-Up Decision Framework

Scale when: (1) IOFC has been above Rs 80/cow/day for 6+ consecutive months. (2) Calving interval is below 14 months. (3) Herd SCC below 300K. (4) You have a reliable milk buyer. Do not scale to fix a management problem — fix the management first, then scale the profit.

Value Addition Opportunities

Processing even 20% of your milk into ghee, paneer, or fresh yogurt can double your per-litre revenue. Here is the ROI for each option.

Desi Ghee Production

Litres to make 1 kg ghee (cow) 20–25 litres
Ghee selling price (direct) Rs 2,500–3,200/kg
Effective milk revenue Rs 110–145/litre
Labor + processing cost Rs 300–500/kg

A 50-litre/day ghee operation produces ~2.2 kg ghee/day → Rs 5,000–6,600/day gross → Rs 1.5–2.0 lakh/month over raw milk revenue.

Revenue multiplier: 1.5–2.0× raw milk

Fresh Paneer / Cottage Cheese

Litres to make 1 kg paneer 7–9 litres
Paneer selling price (direct) Rs 1,000–1,400/kg
Effective milk revenue Rs 130–180/litre equivalent
Labor + packaging cost Rs 150–250/kg

Best for urban markets and restaurant supply. Short shelf life requires a reliable daily off-take customer. Scale up in Ramadan and Eid when demand spikes 2–3×.

Revenue multiplier: 2.0–2.5× raw milk

Fresh Dahi / Yogurt

1 litre milk → 1 kg dahi → Rs 150–200/kg vs Rs 110/litre raw. Minimal equipment (stainless pots, incubator). Can start with 10–20 litres/day to test market before scaling.

Revenue multiplier: 1.3–1.7× raw milk

Doorstep Delivery (Direct-to-Consumer)

Sell 20 L/day at Rs 160–180/litre (vs Rs 110 farmgate) via a WhatsApp subscription round. Covers 20–25 households within 3km. Adds Rs 50,000–70,000/month net over processor price on that portion.

Revenue multiplier: 1.4–1.6× farmgate price

HerdManager.co Profit Tools

Every profitability metric in this guide is tracked automatically by HerdManager.co. From IOFC dashboards to SCC trend alerts — built for Pakistani dairy farms.

Profit Per Cow Dashboard

See net profit, revenue, and cost breakdown for every individual animal. Spot your loss-makers at a glance and act before month-end.

IOFC Auto-Tracker

HerdManager.co calculates IOFC daily from milk yield and feed cost inputs. Weekly herd average, individual cow ranking, and seasonal trend charts — zero spreadsheets required.

SCC Trend Alerts

Automated alerts when any cow's SCC crosses your defined threshold. Catch subclinical mastitis 2–3 weeks before it becomes a clinical case — saving Rs 15,000–25,000 per avoided event.

Calving Interval Optimiser

Real-time CI tracking for every cow. Auto-alerts for heat detection windows, overdue breeders, and VWP expiry. Cut average CI by 1–2 months within the first year of use.

Financial Reports

Monthly P&L, annual profit per cow, feed cost trend, milk revenue by channel, and ROI tracker. Export to PDF for your accountant, bank, or investor in one click.

AI Advisory

Ask the HerdManager.co AI "What is my herd's IOFC this week?" or "Which cow should I cull?" in English, Urdu, or Roman Urdu. Get actionable answers from your own farm data in seconds.

Start tracking your profit

10-Year Farm Financial Model

A simplified trajectory for a 50-cow dairy farm started in Pakistan in 2026. Based on HF/F1 crossbred herd, Rs 110/litre farmgate price, IOFC growing as management improves.

Year Herd Size Avg Yield (L/cow/day) Annual Revenue Annual OPEX Net Profit Milestone
Year 1 50 18 Rs 35.6 lakh Rs 36 lakh −Rs 0.4 lakh Investment + setup. Near break-even.
Year 2 50 20 Rs 39.6 lakh Rs 33 lakh Rs 6.6 lakh Management improves, CI drops, ration optimised.
Year 3 55 22 Rs 47.9 lakh Rs 35 lakh Rs 12.9 lakh F1 heifers entering herd, quality premiums secured.
Year 5 75 24 Rs 79.2 lakh Rs 50 lakh Rs 29.2 lakh Scale-up funded from internal cash flows. Value addition started.
Year 10 120 27 Rs 1.42 crore Rs 82 lakh Rs 60 lakh Mature farm. High PW genetics. Ghee + paneer revenue included.

Model assumptions: milk price Rs 110/litre escalating 5%/year, 300 milking days/year, OPEX includes feed, labor, vet, amortization. Excludes land cost and initial animal purchase capex. Actual results vary with management quality, breed, and market conditions.

Cumulative Return on Initial Investment

A Rs 12–15 million 50-cow farm investment recovers the full capital by Year 4–5 under the model above. By Year 10, cumulative net profit exceeds Rs 1.5–2.0 crore — a 10–13× return on original investment over the decade.

Frequently Asked Questions

The most common questions about dairy farm profitability in Pakistan — answered with numbers.

How much profit can I make from 10 cows in Pakistan?
A well-managed 10-cow HF or F1 farm generates Rs 50,000–80,000/month net after feed, labor, vet, and amortization costs. Key conditions: average yield above 20L/cow/day, milk price Rs 110–130/litre, and IOFC above Rs 80/cow/day.
How much profit can I make from 50 cows in Pakistan?
A 50-cow commercial farm generates Rs 2–4 lakh/month net. Top-quartile farms with IOFC above Rs 120/cow/day, calving interval below 13 months, and SCC below 200,000 cells/mL consistently hit Rs 3.5–4 lakh/month.
How much profit can I make from 100 cows in Pakistan?
A professionally managed 100-cow farm generates Rs 5–10 lakh/month net. Scale economics drop fixed cost per cow by 50–60% vs a 10-cow farm, and bulk feed discounts and processor contracts add another Rs 1–2 lakh/month margin.
What is IOFC and how do I calculate it?
IOFC (Income Over Feed Cost) = (Daily litres × milk price Rs/litre) minus daily feed cost per cow. Example: 22L × Rs 110 = Rs 2,420 revenue. Feed cost Rs 680/day. IOFC = Rs 1,740/day. Target Rs 100+/cow/day. Track it weekly in HerdManager.co.
How do I improve IOFC on my dairy farm?
Improve IOFC by: (1) increasing milk yield through genetics and nutrition, (2) reducing feed cost by growing own fodder or buying in bulk, (3) optimising TMR ration to minimise waste, and (4) improving SCC to earn quality premiums. Track weekly — not monthly.
Which breed gives the best IOFC in Pakistan conditions?
F1 crossbred (Sahiwal×HF) gives the best IOFC in Pakistan. It yields 18–26 L/day with lower cooling and health costs than pure HF. The Sahiwal heat tolerance gene cuts summer yield loss by 15–20% vs pure HF — which directly improves summer IOFC.
How does calving interval affect dairy farm profitability?
Every extra month of CI beyond 12 costs Rs 8,000–12,000/cow in lost milk revenue and delayed calf income. A 50-cow herd with average CI of 16 months vs 13 months loses Rs 12–18 lakh/year. Improving CI from 16 to 13 months is often the single biggest profit improvement available.
What is the ROI of SCC improvement on a dairy farm?
Reducing SCC from 400K to below 200K cells/mL earns Rs 5–10/litre quality premium from processors (Rs 9–16 lakh/year on 50 cows), reduces clinical mastitis frequency by 30–50% (saving Rs 7–12 lakh/year in treatment + lost milk), and reduces subclinical yield loss of 5–15%.
Is ghee production a good investment for dairy farmers in Pakistan?
Yes — ghee converts raw milk revenue of Rs 110/litre to Rs 110–145/litre equivalent. A 50-litre/day ghee operation adds Rs 1.5–2.0 lakh/month net over raw milk farmgate sales. Capital required: Rs 50,000–150,000 for equipment. Break-even in 2–4 months.
Is paneer / cottage cheese worth producing on a dairy farm?
Paneer is the highest-margin value-added product at 2–2.5× raw milk revenue. It requires consistent quality control and a reliable daily customer. Best started at 10–20 litres/day for a restaurant or caterer, then scaled. Shelf life is 3–5 days — distribution must be same-day or next-day.
When should I scale my dairy farm from 10 to 50 cows?
Scale when IOFC has been above Rs 80/cow/day for 6+ consecutive months, calving interval is below 14 months, SCC is below 300K cells/mL, and you have a confirmed milk off-taker for the increased volume. Do not scale to solve a management problem — fix management first.
How can HerdManager.co help me track dairy farm profitability?
HerdManager.co automatically calculates IOFC daily from your milk yield and feed cost entries. The profit per cow dashboard, SCC trend alerts, calving interval tracker, and financial reports give you everything needed to manage profitability in real-time — without spreadsheets.
What is the best breed for profitability in Pakistan?
F1 crossbred (Sahiwal×HF) offers the best overall profitability for most Pakistani farms. For premium ghee markets, Nili-Ravi buffalo is unbeatable due to 6–8% fat milk. Pure HF is most profitable at large commercial scale (100+ cows) with full TMR feeding and cooling infrastructure.
How do I reduce feed cost on a dairy farm in Pakistan?
Grow maize silage (cheapest energy source), buy oats/berseem in season, purchase concentrate in 3-month bulk lots, implement TMR to cut waste from 15% to 5%, and ration by lactation stage. These four steps together can reduce feed cost per litre by 25–35%.
What is a good calving rate for a Pakistani dairy farm?
Target calving rate of 85–90% (heifers served: calves born). This requires conception rate above 50%, pregnancy loss below 10%, and stillbirth rate below 5%. Most Pakistani farms average 65–75% — a 10–15% improvement is achievable in 12 months with better heat detection and nutrition.
How do I calculate the ROI of installing a TMR mixer?
A TMR mixer for 50 cows costs Rs 300,000–500,000. It reduces feed waste by 10–15%, improves rumen efficiency (1–2L/cow/day yield gain), and reduces SCC via better buffering. At Rs 110/litre, 2L extra yield on 50 cows = Rs 11,000/day = Rs 3.3 lakh/month. Payback in 1–2 months.
What financial records should a dairy farmer keep?
Monthly: milk revenue by cow, feed cost by type, vet/medicine cost, labor cost. Per cow: lactation records, calving dates, breeding events, SCC history. Annual: P&L statement, profit per cow ranking, cost per litre, IOFC trend, and herd inventory value. HerdManager.co auto-generates all of these.
How much does a dairy farm manager earn in Pakistan?
An experienced dairy farm manager in Punjab earns Rs 60,000–120,000/month depending on herd size and performance bonuses. Performance-linked pay (bonus for hitting IOFC and CI targets) consistently outperforms fixed salary in farm profitability outcomes.
What are the biggest mistakes new dairy farmers make in Pakistan?
Top five: (1) Overpaying for poor-quality animals with no lactation records. (2) Underestimating summer feed cost — silage is not optional. (3) Ignoring SCC until clinical mastitis is widespread. (4) Scaling herd size before mastering 10-cow management. (5) Not tracking IOFC — flying blind on the most important number.
How do I get started with HerdManager.co to track profitability?
Register at HerdManager.co and add your animals with their identification numbers and lactation history. Enter daily milk yields and feed costs for each cow. The IOFC dashboard, SCC tracker, calving interval planner, and profit per cow report populate automatically. The AI assistant answers questions from your own farm data in English, Urdu, or Roman Urdu.

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