Take Control of Your Grain Sales with Gradable's "My Sales"
If you have contracts with ADM or POET, the 'My Sales' tab is your central command center for everything related to your grain contracts, deliveries, and payments.
ByDahn Clemens·Jun 4, 2026
Gradable Resources
Take Control of Your Grain Sales with Gradable's "My Sales" Hub
Farming is complicated enough without having to dig through a filing cabinet to find your latest scale ticket or figure out how many bushels you have left to deliver on a contract. You need your grain marketing data to be as mobile and hardworking as you are.
That’s where the Gradable app comes in.
If you have contracts with ADM or POET, the "My Sales" section is your central command center for everything related to your grain contracts, deliveries, and payments. The app automatically syncs your data—meaning no manual data entry or adding your own contracts by hand.
Here is a deep dive into how you can use the "My Sales" features to streamline your operation this season.
1. Complete Contract Visibility
No more guessing where you stand on your deliveries. Gradable puts your ADM and POET contract details right in the palm of your hand.
Quick Overviews with the Task List: Located right on your Market Home Screen, the Task List gives you a bird's-eye view of items requiring your immediate attention. You can instantly see contracts that are ready for delivery within the next 30 days, contracts that need futures or basis set, and documents awaiting your signature. Best of all, clicking on any task brings you right to the relevant information in your My Sales section.
Track Your Progress: Want to see exactly how many bushels you have left to deliver? Navigate to the My Sales section, which defaults right to your Contracts tab. Click on the green quantity number on any contract to open its details. The "To Deliver" section will show you your exact remaining balance.
Pro-Tip for Desktop Users: If you are managing your books from your home office, log in to Gradable.com on your desktop. From the Contracts tab, you can use the Download button on the right to easily export your contract data for your records.
2. Track Your Deliveries with Scale Tickets
Keeping track of scale tickets during the rush of harvest is notoriously difficult. Gradable digitally syncs this process so you never lose a ticket again.
View Recent Tickets: In the My Sales section, you can select the Tickets tab to view all of your synced scale tickets. By default, your newest applied tickets float right to the top.
Connect Tickets to Contracts: Ever wonder exactly which loads were applied to which contract? It’s easy. Click on any specific contract to bring up its details, then scroll down to the "Tickets" dropdown. This will list every single scale ticket applied to that specific contract. You can even tap the individual ticket to view the exact details of that delivery.
Export Your Tickets: Just like your contracts, you can export your ticket data straight from the desktop version of Gradable.com using the Download button.
3. Stay on Top of Your Payments with Settlements
Knowing when and how you are getting paid is the most important part of the job.
Centralized Settlements: Found right next to the Tickets tab in the My Sales section, this area houses all of your settlements directly from your buyer.
Trace Your Payments: Just like you can tie tickets to a contract, you can trace your settlements, too. Open a contract, scroll down to the "Settlements" dropdown, and see exactly which payments have been applied to your fulfilled contracts.
Ready to streamline your grain marketing? Open the Gradable app today, navigate to the My Sales tab, and take seamless control of your ADM and POET contracts, tickets, and settlements from anywhere, at any time.
GEnd of article · Gradable Resources · Vol. 02 · Spring 2026
About the byline
Dahn Clemens
Customer Success Lead
Dahn Clemens oversees commercial customer success at Gradable, bridging the gap between traditional agribusiness and modern AgTech. He holds a degree in Agricultural Economics from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and brings valuable, hands-on industry experience from his previous roles in grain origination and merchandising distiller grains.