The Role of Data in Optimising Factory Performance

How Food Manufacturing will Shape Up in 2026

The UK food and drink manufacturing industry shows no signs of slowing down in 2026. If anything, the pace of change is accelerating. With rapid advances in technology, evolving consumer expectations, ongoing supply chain pressures and tighter margins, manufacturers are being challenged to do far more than simply stand still. Success now depends on being agile, forward-thinking and ready to adapt quickly.

At True North Talent, we’re in constant conversation with industry leaders, hiring managers and professionals across the sector. That gives us a real, on-the-ground view of how the landscape is shifting - and what businesses need to stay competitive in the years ahead.

The Role of Data in Optimising Factory Performance

In food and drink manufacturing, margins are tight, customer expectations are high, and downtime is expensive. Everyone talks about working smarter, but what does that actually look like on the factory floor? More often than not, the answer is data.

Used properly, data isn’t just numbers on a dashboard – it’s one of the most powerful tools manufacturers have to improve performance, reduce waste and make better decisions, faster.

Turning information into insight

Most factories are already sitting on huge amounts of data. Production outputs, downtime logs, quality checks, waste levels, labour hours – it’s all there. The challenge is turning that information into something meaningful.

When teams can clearly see where time is being lost, where waste is creeping in, or where quality issues keep reoccurring, improvement stops being guesswork. Decisions become fact-based rather than reactive, which is when real operational gains start to happen.

Reducing downtime and improving efficiency

One of the biggest wins from better data use is reducing downtime. Tracking machine performance and identifying patterns can help spot issues before they become failures. Predictive maintenance, for example, allows engineering teams to fix problems early rather than reacting after a line has already stopped.

On the production side, data helps highlight bottlenecks, balance lines more effectively, and improve overall equipment effectiveness (OEE). Small improvements, consistently applied, can make a big difference to output and cost.

Supporting quality and food safety

Data also plays a critical role in maintaining food safety and quality standards. Real-time monitoring, trend analysis, and accurate reporting make it easier to stay compliant and audit ready. More importantly, they help teams prevent issues rather than firefight them.

When quality teams have clear visibility of recurring issues, they can focus on root cause analysis and long-term solutions, not just short-term fixes.

The people behind the data

Technology and systems are only part of the story. Data is only as good as the people interpreting it and acting on it. As factories become more data-driven, there’s growing demand for managers, engineers and operations leaders who are comfortable working with data and translating insight into action.

This shift is changing the skill sets businesses need – combining operational know-how with analytical thinking and strong leadership on the factory floor.

Making data work for your operation

The most successful manufacturers don’t collect data for the sake of it. They focus on the metrics that genuinely impact performance, communicate them clearly, and embed them into daily decision-making.

How True North Talent Can Help

At True North Talent, we work with food and drink manufacturers who are building data-led operations and need the right people to make that happen. Whether it’s operations leaders, engineers or technical specialists, having the right talent in place is just as important as the systems themselves.

👉 Because in the end, data doesn’t optimise factories – people do

 

 

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Author
Amy Griffith

Amy Griffith

Managing Director

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