Episode

TCU Ranch Management Program

Podcast
American Cattlemen Podcast
Published
Mar 23, 2026
Duration seconds
1509
Processing state
not_requested
Canonical source
https://americancattlemen.podbean.com/e/tcu-ranch-management-program/
Audio
https://mcdn.podbean.com/mf/web/kj55bb6nyh2cw4wq/AC_TCU_Ranch_Dr_Garcia_FIX9e4h6.mp3
JSON
/v1/public/podcasts/american-cattlemen-podcast-6597360/episodes/tcu-ranch-management-program
Markdown
/podcast/american-cattlemen-podcast-6597360/tcu-ranch-management-program.md

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Summary

Welcome back to the American Cattlemen Podcast. Just ahead, we have Dustin Hector, he's the Director of Business Development for American Cattlemen Media, and he sits down with Dr. Matthew Garcia, the Director of TCU Ranch Management. Dr. Garcia begins by outlining his personal and professional journey, from growing up on a cow-calf operation in Central New Mexico to earning advanced degrees in beef and dairy cattle genetics and genomics, as well as an MBA to strengthen his business and management skills. His career has spanned roles with USDA, Louisiana State University, and Utah State University, where he worked heavily in ranch succession planning, ranch consulting, and aligning production systems with available resources. He explains that he joined the TCU Ranch Management program to make a meaningful impact by preparing the next generation of ranch managers. He then describes how the TCU program has evolved over the last year to stay modern while preserving its foundational focus on understanding the true cost and long-term impacts of managerial decisions. The curriculum now incorporates more guest speakers on topics such as agricultural legal liability, negotiations, energy, contracts and leases, and water development—issues that are increasingly critical, especially in Texas. On generational transfer, Dr. Garcia highlights the aging demographics of agricultural asset owners and the urgent need for structured mentorship and formal transition plans. Without a clear, legal succession plan, ranches are at risk of being sold and converted to non-agricultural uses, resulting in permanent loss of productive land. He explains that students complete a capstone management plan that first covers a five-year long-range strategy under normal conditions, then extends another…