Agricultural & Farm Requisition Form

Season

Farm / Operator Information

 

Entity Name

Address Line 1

Address Line 2

City, State, Postal Code

Field / Gate #

GPS / Coordinates

License / Permit #

Date

Agri-Vendor Supplier

 

Entity Name

Address Line 1

Address Line 2

City, State, Postal Code

Account Manager

GPS / Coordinates

License / Permit #


Soil Condition

Crop Phase

Applicator Name

Payment Terms

FOB Point

Express Delivery

A
B
C
D
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F
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Stock # / ID

Item Description

Grade / Active

Bulk Unit

Quantity

Price

Line Total

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Subtotal
$0.00
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Tax 10%
$0.00
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Freight / Hauling
 
105
 
 
 
 
 
Volume Rebate
 
106
 
 
 
 
 
Total Order
$0.00

Chemical Handling / Gate Access Notes

Farm Manager Signature

Form Template Insights

Please remove this form template insights section before publishing.

Overall Form Strengths

Creating a template for an Agricultural & Farm Requisition requires a structure that balances the rugged reality of field operations with the precision of agribusiness accounting. This form serves as the bridge between the farm manager’s operational needs and the financial office’s budget tracking.

Here are the detailed operational insights for your template design.

 

1. Seasonal Synchronization

In agriculture, timing is everything. A requisition for fertilizer is useless if it arrives after the planting window has closed.

  • Insight: Requisitions are often planned months in advance but must be executed within narrow "application windows" dictated by weather and soil temperature.
  • Template Design: Include a Desired Delivery Window rather than a single date. This allows the supplier to coordinate bulk logistics (like heavy tanker trucks) within the farm's operational schedule.

2. Unit of Measure (UoM) Complexity

Agricultural supplies are ordered in vastly different scales depending on the size of the farm.

  • Insight: Ordering "10" of an item could mean 10 bags, 10 pallets, or 10 tons. Confusion here causes massive logistical bottlenecks.
  • Template Design: Use a mandatory, standardized UoM Dropdown:
    • Weight: Metric Tons, Pounds, Kilograms.
    • Volume: Gallons, Liters, Bushels.
    • Packaging: Totes (IBC), Pallets, or 50lb Bags.

3. The "Volume Rebate" and Bulk Tiering

Agricultural inputs like seed and chemicals are frequently subject to complex rebate structures.

  • Insight: Suppliers often provide rebates based on the total volume ordered across a "program" or brand family.
  • Template Design: Include a field for Brand/Manufacturer Name alongside the product name. This allows the accounting team to track if the requisition qualifies for a manufacturer-direct rebate check at the end of the harvest.

4. Chemical Safety and Application Data

When ordering "Crop Protection" (herbicides, pesticides, fungicides), the form must act as a record of intent.

  • Insight: Farm staff need to know exactly where and how a chemical is intended to be used to ensure the right product was ordered for the specific crop.
  • Template Design: Include a Target Crop/Field ID field.
    • Example: "Requisitioning 500 gallons of Glyphosate for North Corn Field 4."
    • This ensures that the chemical ordered is compatible with the crop planted in that specific location.

5. Cold Chain and Biological Handling

Modern farming often involves biological inputs, such as livestock vaccines or "innoculants" for seeds, which are highly sensitive to heat.

  • Insight: If these items sit on a loading dock in the sun, they become ineffective, leading to significant financial loss.
  • Template Design: Add a Handling Priority toggle:
    • Standard (Non-perishable)
    • Climate Controlled (Requires refrigeration)
    • Hazmat (Requires specialized transport)

6. Asset Allocation: Equipment vs. Consumables

A farm requisition often mixes "parts" for repair with "inputs" for growth.

  • Insight: For accounting purposes, a tractor tire is an equipment expense, while diesel fuel is an operating expense.
  • Template Design: Use a Requisition Category field to help the finance team sort the data:
    • Inputs: Seed, Fertilizer, Chemicals.
    • Maintenance: Spare Parts, Lubricants, Filters.
    • Livestock: Feed, Bedding, Veterinary Supplies.
    • Logistics: Fuel, Propane, Water.
 

Mandatory Questions Recommendation

Please remove this mandatory questions recommendation section before publishing.

Mandatory Field Rationale

To ensure an Agricultural & Farm Requisition functions as a reliable procurement tool, specific fields must be mandatory. In farming, the cost of error is high—ordering the wrong fertilizer or missing a delivery window can result in a lost crop cycle.

Here are the mandatory questions for your template and the operational reasons behind them:

1. Field ID or Crop Assignment

Why: It ensures "Input Compatibility." A farm is often a patchwork of different crops (e.g., corn, soybeans, wheat) with different chemical tolerances. A mandatory field for the Target Field or Crop Type prevents a technician from accidentally ordering or applying a chemical that would kill the crop in that specific area. It links the expense directly to the productive asset.

2. Unit of Measure (UoM)

Why: It prevents "Logistical Scaling" errors. In agriculture, "10" is not a specific quantity. It could be 10 bags, 10 pallets, or 10 tons. Requiring a specific UoM (e.g., Gallons, IBC Totes, Metric Tons) is essential for the supplier to calculate the weight and choose the correct delivery vehicle, such as a flatbed vs. a liquid tanker.

3. Brand and Active Ingredient

Why: It manages "Efficacy and Resistance." Generic brands may have different concentrations of an active ingredient. Making this mandatory ensures the farm manager knows exactly what is being put into the soil. It also helps the agronomist track "Mode of Action" to prevent weeds or pests from developing a resistance to a single type of chemical over time.

4. Delivery Point / Drop Zone

Why: It coordinates "Remote Site Logistics." Large farms often have multiple entrance points, silos, and chemical sheds spread across thousands of acres. A mandatory delivery location (e.g., "North Grain Bin" or "Shed B") ensures the driver doesn't leave expensive, perishable, or hazardous materials in an unmonitored or incorrect location.

5. Volume Rebate Eligibility

Why: It tracks "Net Input Costs." Agricultural suppliers often use tiered pricing. A mandatory check for Rebate Program Name or Bulk Tier ensures the accounting office can claim the "cash-back" or credits owed at the end of the season. Without this data at the point of requisition, the farm may lose out on significant financial incentives that lower the total cost of production.

6. Desired Application/Delivery Window

Why: It accounts for "Biological Timing." Agricultural products are "time-perishable" in their utility. Fertilizer must be in the ground before a specific growth stage. Making the Delivery Window mandatory allows the logistics provider to prioritize orders based on the biological needs of the crop, ensuring the inputs arrive when they can actually be used effectively.

7. Storage and Handling Requirements

Why: It maintains "Product Integrity." Many agricultural biologicals (like innoculants or vaccines) require refrigeration, while others are classified as hazardous. A mandatory handling field (e.g., "Requires Cold Storage" or "Hazmat Handling") alerts the transport team and the farm's receiving staff to move the product to a controlled environment immediately upon arrival to prevent degradation.

 

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