Most of Qatar's commercial breeder farm owners do not think of their record-keeping system as a cost. They think of it as an administrative task - something the supervisor does at the end of the day, something the manager reviews when there is time, something that becomes important when a bank asks for documentation or a regulator comes for an inspection.
This framing is exactly wrong. Record-keeping is not an administrative task - it is the data infrastructure of your business. In Qatar's breeder sector, the quality of your records determines whether you can detect disease early, manage feed costs precisely, forecast egg production accurately, and access the financing that funds growth. Paper systems do not just fail at these functions - they actively cost you money by preventing the management actions that data makes possible.
The typical record-keeping system on Qatar's commercial breeder farms looks like this: a supervisor records morning and evening data in a shed register - mortality count, feed consumed, water consumed - and hands the register to the farm manager at the end of the week. The farm manager reviews it when time permits, typically to check if anything looks obviously wrong. If there is a problem, it has usually already been visible for several days. If performance is declining gradually, no one catches it until the batch is complete.
This system has four fundamental failures that cost Qatar breeder farms money every single cycle:
Let us put specific numbers on what paper record-keeping costs Qatar's commercial breeder farms:
Without FCR tracking in QAR, most Qatar breeder farms overfeed by 5-8% relative to breed recommendations at various production stages. On a farm of 5,000 breeders with feed representing 68% of production cost, this translates to a measurable annual feed waste figure - money that could stay as profit.
When avian influenza (strict zone protocols), Newcastle disease events are caught 3-4 days late - as they typically are with manual monitoring - the treatment cost is higher, the mortality is greater, and the post-disease egg production recovery takes longer. For Qatar's breeder farms, each late-detected disease event costs more than a full year of digital management software investment.
Qatar's agricultural lenders - Qatar Development Bank (QDB) and Qatar National Bank (QNB) - require structured production performance documentation for farm loan applications. Farms with paper records are either declined or offered smaller facilities at less favourable rates. The compounding cost of accessing more expensive informal credit rather than formal agricultural loans is substantial.
Qatar's Baladna Farm and government-supported domestic hatchery operations hatcheries and institutional buyers are increasingly requiring production documentation from their supplier breeder farms. Farms that cannot produce vaccination records, batch performance histories, and traceable production data risk losing supply contracts to better-documented competitors.
Ministry of Municipality and Environment requires commercial poultry operations to maintain structured records covering vaccination history, disease surveillance data, medicine usage, mortality logs, and biosecurity protocols. As regulatory enforcement strengthens - particularly for farms supplying Qatar's urban and institutional markets - farms without structured health and production records face increasing compliance risk.
Qatar's post-blockade food sovereignty strategy requires domestic farms to meet government procurement documentation standards - farms without structured records are excluded from the most valuable institutional buying channels. Digital management systems generate these records automatically as a by-product of daily farm operations - turning a compliance burden into a benefit.
Digital farm record-keeping is not a complicated technology project. On a Qatar breeder farm running our management system, it looks like this:
These five metrics require digital tracking to be measured with the frequency and accuracy that makes them useful for management decisions:
Stop losing money to paper records. Contact Tulassi to start your Qatar breeder farm's digital transition today.
No. The mobile application is designed for simplicity - daily data entry takes under 5 minutes per shed and requires no technical background. Most Qatar farms are fully operational within 3-5 working days of onboarding.
Regulatory requirements in Qatar typically cover vaccination history, mortality records, medicine usage logs, biosecurity documentation, and batch production records. Our system generates all of these as a natural output of daily farm management - turning compliance from a burden into a routine.
Yes. The management system generates legally structured records that are stored securely in the cloud and can be printed or exported at any time. These records are more detailed, more consistent, and more useful than paper registers.
Digital batch performance records, FCR reports, and QAR-denominated financial statements provide exactly the structured production documentation that Qatar's agricultural lenders require for farm loan assessments.
The mobile application records data locally and syncs to the cloud automatically when connectivity is restored. No data is lost during connectivity disruptions.