At UK retailer Marks & Spencer, most conversations in the past two years involving data and analytics have revolved around COVID-19.
For Callum Staff, Head of Data Science and Analytics at Marks & Spencer, the global crisis meant putting major data science projects on ice to better support the retailer’s supply chain. He considers the move ‘a real shift’ in the relationship between business and data science at M&S.
“It showed the sort of support that we can provide; I want to further embed the data and analytics team in key M&S functions,” he says. “We've got tools that allow us to do that, and we want to turn them into fully fledged software. It will help bake my operating model into any project.”
In this week’s Business of Data podcast, Staff talks about how he’s working to build on the ties the pandemic-era has helped his team build with business stakeholders to integrate data further into the company’s operating model.
One of the ways Staff’s team is already helping to optimize M&S’s supply chain is through space planning in stores. They provide insights to improve demand forecasting and optimize inventory levels.
The data science team has also been involved in planning for a new law regulating the sale of fatty, sugary and salty foods that will come into effect in the UK this April. It will mean retailers can no longer place these foods at store entrances and other main points. Advertising these products on TV and online will also be restricted.
“Our data quality team's been involved in the conversations around this new law from the start,” Staff says.
But Staff believes he must be mindful of his approach as he works towards greater integration between data science and business teams. He wants to ensure that the models and systems his team builds meet business needs and integrate with staff workflows.
“It's all very well building a new dashboard or building a new machine learning model,” he says. “But if you just plonk it somewhere and leave it, it's never going to grow. We’re spending a lot of time thinking about how this works day-to-day with people and where it impacts the steps they need to take.”
Success will require constant communication and re-evaluation to ensure Staff’s team’s priorities remain aligned with those of the wider business. But Staff is confident that the greater cross-functional collaboration he’s seen recently will help his team drive further organizational change in the coming months and years.
“It’s really good to have the quants and the tech teams working alongside sales and the traders,” he concludes. “It seems like a really good way of working. COVID-19 showed me that, and hopefully it showed that to other areas of the businesses as well.”