I've spent my entire career in agriculture and am seriously considering a change. Every role I've held has been in the Ag sector, and I'm currently managing a large grain terminal in the Texas Panhandle with 30 hourly employees reporting to me.
This facility used to have seven managers. Now it's just me, and the workload has become unsustainable. Leadership has promised to hire additional support for the past five months, but they "haven't found the right person" yet. I'm averaging 60 hour weeks and working most weekends to handle inbound shuttles and contractor work that can't be done during normal operating hours. To make matters worse, I inherited one side of the operation that was left in poor condition after a previous manager departed.
Across multiple Ag roles, I've consistently found the same pattern: significantly more responsibility than what was advertised, coupled with unfulfilled promises around compensation and advancement. I don't mind hard work, but the gap between my contributions and my compensation has become frustrating.
I'm now exploring whether it makes sense to transition into another heavy industry such as oil and gas or mining. Much of what I do at the grain terminal maps directly to those sectors. I oversee large scale bulk material handling systems, high volume loading and unloading operations, and complex conveyor and elevator networks. It's very similar to what you'd find in mineral processing, rail terminals, or midstream oil & gas facilities. I manage heavy mobile equipment, perform and oversee mechanical maintenance, and regularly weld and fabricate repairs on-site. Safety compliance, contractor coordination, inventory control, and keeping operations running 24/7 are all part of my day-to-day. At the end of the day, a gearbox is a gearbox and an electric motor is an electric motor, regardless of the commodity moving through the system.
Educationally, I hold a B.S. in Agricultural Economics and an M.S. in Finance and Economics, which have given me a strong foundation in operations, budgeting, and economic analysis that should transfer well.
I'd appreciate any thoughts from those who have made similar transitions or who work in these other sectors. Is it worth pursuing opportunities outside of agriculture, or should I focus on finding a better situation within it?
This facility used to have seven managers. Now it's just me, and the workload has become unsustainable. Leadership has promised to hire additional support for the past five months, but they "haven't found the right person" yet. I'm averaging 60 hour weeks and working most weekends to handle inbound shuttles and contractor work that can't be done during normal operating hours. To make matters worse, I inherited one side of the operation that was left in poor condition after a previous manager departed.
Across multiple Ag roles, I've consistently found the same pattern: significantly more responsibility than what was advertised, coupled with unfulfilled promises around compensation and advancement. I don't mind hard work, but the gap between my contributions and my compensation has become frustrating.
I'm now exploring whether it makes sense to transition into another heavy industry such as oil and gas or mining. Much of what I do at the grain terminal maps directly to those sectors. I oversee large scale bulk material handling systems, high volume loading and unloading operations, and complex conveyor and elevator networks. It's very similar to what you'd find in mineral processing, rail terminals, or midstream oil & gas facilities. I manage heavy mobile equipment, perform and oversee mechanical maintenance, and regularly weld and fabricate repairs on-site. Safety compliance, contractor coordination, inventory control, and keeping operations running 24/7 are all part of my day-to-day. At the end of the day, a gearbox is a gearbox and an electric motor is an electric motor, regardless of the commodity moving through the system.
Educationally, I hold a B.S. in Agricultural Economics and an M.S. in Finance and Economics, which have given me a strong foundation in operations, budgeting, and economic analysis that should transfer well.
I'd appreciate any thoughts from those who have made similar transitions or who work in these other sectors. Is it worth pursuing opportunities outside of agriculture, or should I focus on finding a better situation within it?