Platfarm

Willunga grape grower's app Europe-bound.
What do you get when a former Facebook game developer from London runs a McLaren Vale vineyard for a few years, and starts talking with the University of Adelaideâs ThincLab entrepreneurial accelerator in France? Simple: an incredibly exciting, multi-million-dollar international agricultural technology opportunity.
This improbable scenario is the real-life story of digital games producer turned grape grower Oli Madgett and his groundbreaking app, Platfarm. Designed to help grape growers maximise the efficiency of their land management practices, Platfarm draws on multiple information sources to provide contractors with precise, row-by-row instructions regarding required inputs and their quantitiesâall via a humble smartphone or tablet.
âThe app sucks in imagery from things like satellites and drones, to show growers the variability of their land,â says Oli. âThat allows growers and their contractors to draw out whatâs called a prescription map, which shows where work needs to be carried out.
âThen when theyâre out in the field, the app shows them in real time exactly where they are on the map; alerts them when they enter a âprescription zoneâ; advises what workâs required there; and, as they move through the zone, says when to stop or adjust what theyâre doing.â
According to Oli, who bought his vineyard in 2014 after emigrating from England, it promises to help producers all over the world make significant financial gains.
âIn grape growing, if you carry out work on your land more intelligentlyâby spreading the precise, ideal mix of compost and mulch, for example, for every individual square metreâyou can even up the vigour of your blocks.
âThat can take your grapes from grade B to A, which can earn you thousands more per hectare. Plus, you have the potential to save thousands in input costs, because you only use exactly what you need, and extract maximum benefit from it.â
Although currently focusing on the Australian grape industry, Oli says the European marketâparticularly France, Italy, Spain, Portugal and Germanyâis squarely in his sights.
Europeâs easily the biggest grape growing market in the world, and unquestionably represents a multi-million-dollar opportunity for us. So ThincLabâs assistance in France is going to be invaluable.Oli Madgett
Fortuitously based in Chalons in the heart of the iconic Champagne wine region, the French ThincLab team will be heavily involved in Platfarmâs European expansion. Their initial priorities, says Oli, will be leading the recruitment of a French intern with a passion for ag-tech to be the start-upâs first European-team member, and providing introductions to local growers.
âWeâre going over there at the end of the next Australian vintage, around Easter 2018,â he says, âand the ThincLab teamâs going to tap into their network to help us start directly engaging with the French grape growing community.
âWe want to be a high-growth business, so weâre aiming to have at least a couple of thousand European growers using our app by 2020.â
For a relatively novice farmer, now entering only his third season, itâs a remarkable position to be in.
But being a natural entrepreneur, Oli can already see a day when the appâwhich could be equally useful for all kinds of pasture-dependent farmingâexpands well beyond even the global grape growing market.
âWe canât get ahead of ourselves, of course. Weâre still in the early stages of attracting investment.
âBut I have to admit, itâs getting very exciting.â