Time to embrace AI for success in food and beverage
Robot preparing sweet cupcake with cherry, blue background

In the face of high inflation and increased prices, innovative food and beverage companies have turned to artificial intelligence (AI) and more specifically machine learning (ML) to drive efficiency and cut costs.

Increased investment in applied AI and implementation of ML solutions helps food and beverage organisations to reduce waste, improve business processes and meet increased demand in a complex and unstable supply chain.

Most importantly, food and beverage companies in the cloud have an advantage to more quickly kickstart the use of ML due to having the data, analytics and ML readily available as a service.

As food and beverage companies continue to delve into applied AI, the ability to host and visualise data in the cloud will be critical to identify opportunities to optimise operations, cut costs and reduce waste.

Accuracy and speed

One way that AI helps food and beverage companies is by improving the accuracy and speed of product recommendations and pricing strategies in sales. With the currently volatile raw material and energy prices, food and beverage companies must dynamically determine the right product offerings and price point to sustain sales volumes.

Global bakery ingredients business Zeelandia Group has addressed the challenges of higher costs and lack of available bakery ingredients by deploying a ML model that recommends products and prices to be offered to the bakeries based on what similar customers are buying.

Through the implementation of applied AI, Zeelandia Group achieved an 83 per cent faster time to prepare product recommendations for customers, cutting the time down from 30 minutes to 5 minutes. As a result of product recommendations taking less time, Zeelandia Group employees were able to provide a better customer experience in addition to increased revenue per transaction and share of wallet per customer.

Sustainability

Another area where food and beverage companies have applied AI and ML is sustainability. Food and beverage organisations have turned toward ML to help reduce waste and identify inefficiencies within the supply chain.

For example, leading global provider of goat and organic cow cheese Amalthea, has turned to applied AI to make the cheese quality more predictable and to maximise yield, build customer loyalty and boost sustainability. Previously, Amalthea could only manually analyse milk yield on a weekly basis, which made it difficult to adjust process parameters steering the process to optimise the yield.

By leaning on ML, Amalthea can now view the yields immediately in addition to receiving direct insight into what is causing a yield change. This helps Amalthea to reduce its overall waste from manufacturing, as the company can quickly identify pain points and improve processes simultaneously.

These changes have had a direct impact on the company’s profitability and bottom line, as for every one per cent increase in yields, Amalthea expects to save more than $800,000.

Manufacturing automation

Furthermore, the global labour shortage has persisted and has interrupted the output of the food and beverage industry. This shortage can also be attributed to the new generation of workers, who are looking for life-long employment opportunities and value-driven careers rather than working in a factory or in customer service.

Given the increased pressure to maintain supply with heightened demand, food and beverage businesses are investing in manufacturing automation and Industry 4.0 technologies to account for the lack of employees.

For instance, businesses have used AI with robots to automate labour-intensive tasks that previously required human eyes and decisions, such as sorting, grading, cutting and slicing. Moreover, investing and implementing the latest Industry 4.0 technologies has been attracting young talent hungry individuals to use the latest innovation to improve global food and beverage challenges, such as sustainable fishing.

Leading animal nutrition company Nutreco relies on the latest Industry 4.0 technologies for precision farming of shrimps. Nutreco has achieved additional production cycles of healthier shrimps, while at the same time using 30 per cent less feed. Specifically, Nutreco uses audio sensors in aquaculture to listen to the shrimps, understanding when they are hungry. AI determines when and how much the shrimps must be fed to overall help reduce feed waste while prioritising shrimp growth.

With the unprecedented becoming the norm in the food and beverage industry, applied AI will be imperative for businesses to work smarter, not harder. It’s clear that with ML solutions, organisations can save on costs, sustainability can be improved, and workers can focus on delivering on customer experience rather than on mundane tasks.

Food and beverage organisations do not have a choice to adapt in the face of economic uncertainty. Applied AI is imperative to ensure business profitability amidst economic downturn and skyrocketing inflation.

By Jarrod Kinchington, ANZ vice president and managing director, Infor

This article was first published by Food & Drink Business

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