Rubber Boots with Computers
To empower the agri-food chain with fast, clear insight by transforming complex global agricultural data into actionable intelligence.
As agronomists, we have been there: rubber boots in the field, notebooks in hand, trying to make sense of a chaotic mess of agricultural data. From PDFs buried in inboxes to weather data with no context, we’ve seen how frustrating it is to get answers when the data doesn’t speak your language. That’s why we built Terensis. We’re agronomists who speak data, and data scientists who understand crops. We created a way to turn raw, messy agri-data into intelligence that helps you act ahead of your competition.
the Team
Gregor holds a PhD in agricultural sciences from ETH Zurich, specializing in satellite-based yield estimation, and a Master’s in agricultural economics. With firsthand farming experience and a background in international food supply chains, he bridges the gap between academic insight and real-world application. At Terensis, Gregor leads business development and strategy.
Outside the office, you’ll find him chasing the perfect steak, preferably over charcoal and served medium rare.
Lukas holds a PhD in agricultural sciences at ETH Zurich, where he focused on country-scale crop modeling. With a Master’s in geo-informatics and a background in meteorology, he brings deep technical expertise having previously worked in geospatial software development. At Terensis, he leads the technical development of the Terensis Agricultural Engine.
When he's not modeling global crop yields, Lukas recharges by cycling around Lake Greifensee.
Luca holds a Master’s degree in Banking and Finance from USI Lugano and brings financial precision to the Terensis Agricultural Engine. With experience in private debt funds, he now leads the development of data-driven solutions for commodity trading and financial clients.
His idea of a good day? Crunching numbers—and then hitting the track to beat his latest personal best.
Values
We believe in low-ego, high-frequency conversations. A quick check-in beats a long guessing game. Most breakthroughs start with a simple: “What do you think?”
Real teamwork begins with listening. Not the polite kind—the kind where you consider what someone says. It’s how we get better, together.
Agriculture is hard enough. Let’s make the work easier by treating each other with respect, clarity, and kindness. Sharp minds don’t need sharp elbows.
Crop Intelligence