Try to come up with errors relating to the tools that you're going to use. Like, if your burette wasn't rinsed properly, then the KMnO4 solution in the burette will become diluted, and hence more titre will be required to neutralise the fertiliser solution. Since you used more volume, you have used a greater amount of mol, and hence the calculated mass of Fe will be greater than expected.
Or if your pipette wasn't rinsed properly, the H2SO4 solution in the pipette would have been diluted and hence less mol of FeSO4 are formed in the conical flask, meaning that less titre will be required of permanganate to neutralise Fe2+. This would lead to less mols of permanganate being used in the titration, and hence the calculated mass of Fe will be less than expected.
You use the molar ratios of the overall equation, as Somye has written. So n(Fe2+) = 5/1 x n(MnO4). Then you can work out the mass of iron.