Everett AI expands to livestock and protein supply chain operations
Ever.Ag has expanded its Everett Ag Decision Engine to support livestock and animal protein operations. This marks the second phase of its agentic AI rollout, which first began with dairy systems earlier in 2026. The announcement was made last week during the World Pork Expo in Des Moines, Iowa.
The Everett platform is designed to connect and analyze data across agricultural operations. It helps turn information into actionable decisions by organizing workflows and supporting existing tools used by producers and processors. The system is now available for users of Feed Allocation System, Sales and Operations Planning (S&OP) for Animal Protein, and Feedlot IQ.
"What we launched in April was a promise to this industry that Ever.Ag would bring agentic AI to every domain we serve," said Ever.Ag CEO Scott Sexton. "Livestock and animal protein operations are complex, high-stakes environments where the right decision at the right time matters enormously. Ever.Ag has built and brought together the expertise to understand exactly how they work, and Everett puts that expertise to work. That's what makes this different from a generic AI tool."
Livestock operations often deal with biological changes, shifting markets, and operational challenges. Everett addresses these issues by continuously monitoring data, suggesting actions, and allowing users to act without switching between multiple systems.
The platform offers several useful features. In the Feed Allocation System, it supports automated feed planning, identifies gaps, tracks group performance, and alerts users about livestock health risks. In S&OP for Animal Protein, it provides pricing guidance, performance analysis, and insights for processing operations.
Feedlot IQ focuses on tracking pen and lot performance, identifying treatment needs early, and providing daily profit reports.
Ever.Ag plans to expand Everett further into agribusiness operations later in 2026. The company is also developing a version of livestock procurement, expected to be available by the end of the year.
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