Having invested time and money collecting them, few companies want to share data with other businesses. Yet sharing data with others is exactly what experts at dunnhumby, a multinational brand retail consultancy, recommend. It is advice that should be taken seriously, as dunnhumby has an excellent track record when it comes to big data. In the 1990s the firm promoted the idea that data from loyalty cards could be used to better understand customers. Tesco--one of the firm’s clients--liked dunnhumby’s work so much that it bought a stake in the company.
“We talk about the idea of democratising the data,” says Mark Hinds, one of the company’s managing directors. Mr Hinds gives the example of a retailer that carries brand products as well as alternatives that it manufactures itself. Even though the products compete for sales, Mr Hinds says that the retailer should share all the relevant sales data with the brand manufacturer, not just the figures on sales of that manufacturer’s product.
That is partly because sharing spurs innovation. A better understanding of the customer will help the brand manufacturer create new products that will boost the retailer’s bottom line. Mr Hinds says he has seen that happen at Kroger, the largest grocery chain in the US and a Fortune 100 company, with which dunnhumby works. “I think Kroger didn’t historically share own-label information with manufacturers, but we said that every product affects the shopping trip,” says Mr Hinds. “Therefore every product needs to be exposed to a customer lens, and if somebody can produce a similar product with higher quality, they should be able to.”
The data democratisation concept can make companies nervous and so may require buy-in from senior executives. But it is worth it, says Mr Hinds: “I think the culture shift starts by saying, ‘first and foremost, we want to give customers a fantastic shopping trip.’ Manufacturers that have fantastic capability need to be brought into that.”