Inverness bakery turns to tech to make more dough
A graduate placement programme is enabling a Highland bakery to roll out ground-breaking technology to reduce waste and boost profits.
Harry Gow Bakery has employed Andrew Jones, a business and management graduate, through a technology placement programme run by Highlands and Islands Enterprise (HIE).
He graduated from the University of the Highlands and Islands' Inverness campus with an honours degree in business management. As process improvement co-ordinator, for the Inverness-based business, he is introducing a new cutting edge algorithm software to analyse sales on a level greater than ever before and provides real-time product demand predictions.
It is hoped the state-of-the-art approach will reduce waste and help the bakery save tens of thousands of pounds a year.
Mr Jones said: “Forecasting can be hard in the bakery business due to the variable nature of people’s buying habits.
“Our new system will help streamline our production while reducing waste by monitoring our daily sales data over a six-week period. There is huge potential here to help both our margins and the environment at the same time.”
HIE runs the technology placement programme as part of its Northern Innovation Hub, which is funded by the UK government, the European Regional Development Fund and HIE through the Inverness and Highland City-Region Deal. It pairs businesses with talented graduates and students to complete a project that supports business growth.
Mr Jones added: “While at university I was particularly interested in accounting for sustainability and this role has allowed me to put that passion into practice.”
Bakery director Fraser Gow believes the software represents an exciting opportunity to help the firm’s impact on the environment.
The fifth-generation baker said: “We can not only improve our environmental impact but also our bottom line by maximising our sales. It’s a win-win.
“Even if we only save one per cent of turnover on ingredients that’s tens of thousands of pounds that’ll go straight to the bottom line.
“The full potential of the technology is unknown, but the savings are potentially huge.
“Andrew’s experience from his years of working in the manufacturing industry and his university learnings have been of immense benefit to us.”
Lizi Blackwood, technology development manager at the Northern Innovation Hub, said: “This is about helping businesses to boost productivity and profitability through innovation, technology and fresh ideas from new talent while giving students and graduates experience in the working world.
“This is exactly why we set up the technology placement programme. Andrew’s placement with Harry Gow is a great example of how it’s intended to work and we look forward to hearing more about the impact it has.”
For more information about technology placement programme opportunities, visit: nih.hie.co.uk/programmes/technology-placements