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2024 DataIQ 100

Kate Sargent, Chief Data Officer, Financial Times

Describe your career to date

 

I studied Maths at university and then a MSc in Operational Research before a chance job advert for an Analyst role at the National Air Traffic Services provided my first introduction to analysis and data science. 

 

From this point on, I knew that a career in analytics and, later, data was for me. I moved around through several well-known consumer brands including easyJet, Tesco, Ocado, Sky and TUI, each time expanding the breadth of my role and learning about different cultures and how to work with, and influence, different types of people. With each move, my team size grew and, with it, an emerging passion for people management and leadership. 

 

I took up my first Director of Data and Analytics role at Collinson back in 2020, just as the pandemic was getting underway, and successfully steered the function through an extremely difficult period in the company’s history. I kept the team together, created a culture that I remain very proud of today, and established Data and Analytics as a function worthy of a pillar within the corporate strategy. After another year, I was promoted to SVP Data and Analytics. 

 

Restructuring towards the end of 2022 saw my role evolve and I took up a new position of Chief Data Officer at the Financial Times. I have now been in this role since April 2023 and am thoroughly enjoying bringing all my experience to bear in a new sector and in an organisation with a unique culture. 

Data literacy is a key enabler of the value and impact from data. How are you approaching this within your organisation?  

 

I could not agree more. I have a direct reporting function in my current role that is responsible for improving the engagement with, adoption of, and impact from data across the organisation.

 

Since I joined the FT last year, we have launched two key initiatives. Firstly, a Metrics that Matter initiative to define and embed a metrics framework within each of our key business functions that ties back to our company North Star. This is a great mechanism for encouraging all parts of the business to think about their end outcomes, the drivers of these, and how data can help both track and inform these outcomes going forwards. 

 

Secondly, last autumn we launched our first Data Academy with workshop-style and downloadable content across subjects as broad as data storytelling, how to use Looker (our BI tool) and an introduction to generative AI. This had over 700 bookings in its first month with over 200 employees having already attended training in some form within that time. It has been a huge success. 

 

The next initiative in flight aims to embed a process for valuing the analytics that we perform – whether this is producing a dashboard, a deep-dive piece of strategic analytics or operationalising a data science model. This in turn will be used to help the business (and us) understand where the big value drivers are and to better prioritise our efforts and investments. 

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