Control-Tower Equestrian Industry Risk Reward Calculator

Is Your Equestrian Business Losing Revenue From Missed Lesson Inquiries, Boarding Gaps, Horse-Care Confusion, Vet and Farrier Scheduling Problems, Waiver Gaps, Biosecurity Risks, Bad Reviews, and Disconnected Client Records?

Equestrian businesses are horse-care-intensive, safety-sensitive, client-trust-driven operations where profit depends on lesson scheduling, boarding capacity, training consistency, horse health records, staff reliability, veterinary coordination, waiver documentation, biosecurity procedures, and repeatable barn-management systems.

Calculate Your Equestrian Business Risk in 90 Seconds

Answer 6 quick questions. Your results appear instantly without page reloads.

Question 1 of 6 — 16% Complete

Section 1 — Business Stage

Which best describes your equestrian business?

Independent trainer, riding instructor, small boarding barn, lesson program, horse-care startup, tack seller, or owner-operated equestrian service
Growing riding school, boarding facility, training barn, clinic operator, show team, equestrian retail brand, or multi-staff horse-care operation
Regional equestrian center, breeding operation, show program, therapeutic riding organization, multi-discipline barn, or franchise-ready equestrian business
Enterprise equestrian organization, large boarding and training facility, multi-location horse business, equine event network, association, or institutional equine program

Section 2 — Workflow Documentation

How well are your lesson procedures, horse-care workflows, feeding instructions, medication records, vet and farrier schedules, boarding agreements, waiver process, biosecurity procedures, staff duties, and client follow-up rules documented?

Mostly informal and dependent on owner, trainer, barn manager, instructor, groom, or staff memory
Partially documented but scattered across files, whiteboards, notebooks, emails, spreadsheets, texts, vet records, and social media messages
Structured but still manual, hard to repeat, and difficult to train from
Centralized, governed, searchable, and consistently followed

Section 3 — Knowledge Loss

How much critical equestrian knowledge is spread across horse profiles, feed charts, vet records, farrier notes, training plans, lesson schedules, boarding agreements, waiver files, show calendars, client messages, and employee memory?

Major risk — too much depends on memory, whiteboards, scattered files, and informal barn communication
Moderate risk — key horse-care, lesson, boarding, staff, vet, farrier, client, and safety information exists but is hard to find
Low risk — most horse-care, training, lesson, boarding, client, and vendor information is organized
Minimal risk — equestrian knowledge is governed, searchable, reusable, and protected as a business asset

Section 4 — Monthly Revenue at Risk

Estimate the monthly value lost from missed lesson inquiries, boarding vacancies, slow training-program follow-up, clinic registration gaps, weak camp promotion, client churn, missed show opportunities, tack or merchandise follow-up, staff confusion, and poor client communication.

$2.5K/month
$7.5K/month
$20K/month
$50K+/month

Section 5 — Horse Care, Scheduling & Service Loss

How much is lost through lesson cancellations, missed rescheduling, boarding turnover, late vet or farrier coordination, unclear feeding instructions, medication tracking gaps, staff overtime, repeated client questions, show logistics problems, and inefficient barn communication?

About 15%
About 25%
About 35%
45% or more

Section 6 — Safety, Liability, Biosecurity & Reputation Exposure

How exposed is your equestrian business to rider injuries, horse-care disputes, waiver gaps, vaccination or Coggins tracking problems, disease-control failures, biosecurity gaps, emergency-response confusion, bad reviews, insurance issues, or inconsistent client experience?

Low
Moderate
High
Critical

Pinatubo Filly Sets New Record at Tasmanian Sale

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On the evening of Feb. 23, the average sat at AU$36,090—up a huge 53.5% on last year's results. The gross stood at AU$2,815,000—a 44% increase from 12 months ago, despite five fewer lots being sold (78). The median was up 18% at AU$21,000.

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Awaiting Napoleon Solo in the the $425,000 Fountain of Youth Stakes (G2) Feb. 28 at Gulfstream Park will be three colts trained by Saffie Joseph Jr. in Bravaro, Bull by the Horns, and Solitude Dude; as well as some first-time graded stakes runners.
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