According to a recent LinkedIn post from Verdi, the company is positioning its irrigation automation technology as a response to rising labor demands on larger farms. The post highlights that as farm acreage increases, family labor tends to be replaced by paid labor, turning irrigation into a growing operating expense line item.
Claim 55% Off TipRanks
- Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions
- Discover top-performing stock ideas and upgrade to a portfolio of market leaders with Smart Investor Picks
The post suggests that Verdi’s platform aims to reduce manual irrigation work by automating valves and pumps, enabling remote control of irrigation schedules, and providing verification via pressure and flow data. It also mentions alerting capabilities when equipment fails, implying a potential reduction in costly downtime and missed irrigation events.
From an investor perspective, the cited potential savings of $250–500 per acre in labor could appeal to large-scale growers seeking to protect margins amid tight agricultural labor markets. If Verdi can demonstrate these savings at scale and convert them into recurring contracts, the approach may support revenue growth and strengthen its competitive position in farm automation.
The focus on scaling operations without proportionally scaling labor costs aligns with broader agtech trends toward digitization and automation. This positioning may help Verdi tap into capital spending by growers looking to modernize infrastructure, though uptake will likely depend on return-on-investment proof points and integration with existing farm management systems.

