15 January 2025
The data was obtained via the Freedom of Information Act (FOI), and analysed by the Parliament Street Think Tack, observing the data spending of the BBC across the headcount of data scientists and analysts and salaries over the past three years.
In total, the BBC spent £34,655,947 over the period, with a steady increase in investment year on year. Over the past year, spending reached £16,399,147 on 277 staff members, the highest amount during the three years in both spending and number of employees. The size of the data team doubled compared to 2022, during which the BBC spent just £6,140,771.
“The BBC is consumed by a huge audience across the UK and the world. Data is critical to the organisation, particularly enabling programmers and schedulers to better understand viewer or listener behaviour, as millions consume the corporation's content on multiple devices and channels,” said Stuart Harvey, CEO of Datactics. “The broadcaster faces increasing pressure from the regulator to make sure that its taxpayer-funded output remains relevant. In Ofcom's 6th Annual Report on the BBC, published in early 2024, the regulator encouraged the BBC to publish content that relates ‘more authentically to the real-life experience’ of working-class audiences as they watch more TV than any other socio-economic group.”
Over the three years, the BBC also expanded the number of data roles it employed, going from 24 different data job titles to 27.
"Without a doubt, organisations continue to invest more in their data teams, but the trend is for targeted spend to achieve specific outcomes. In a commercial environment, the name of the game is relentless focus on ROI, for organisations like the BBC, data teams represent intelligent ways to manage risk, deliver services in a more personalised fashion and improve internal efficiency. Ultimately, organisations with high data maturity have higher productivity and better, data-driven outcomes,” said Rich Bovey, Chief for Data for AND Digital. “It’s hugely positive to see the BBC’s investment in people AND innovation, bringing in experts in key areas such as data science and data analysis. It's also important to recognise that the benefit of 'data teams' is also through the culture they bring. Enabling and empowering other employees, promoting data literacy and equipping people with the tools and resources make a huge, measurable difference. Proving the value brought by data teams has become a key success criteria for the modern Chief Data Officer and is a prerequisite to continuing positive trend for investment in roles.”
The investment of the BBC follows wider themes of public sector data investment with the departments of the UK government such as His Majesty’s Revenue and Customers (HMRC) recently investing £133 million into data science.