51AVÊÓÆµ

British Cattle Breeders Club Conference: Closing the data loop in auction marts

Scott Donaldson, group director of H&H based in Carlisle, raised the question of who benefits from the data collected in the performance recording and pedigree information of cattle

clock • 2 min read
Scott Donaldson
Image:

Scott Donaldson

Speaking at the British Cattle Breeders Club Conference, Scott Donaldson said: "After a bull has been bought or semen selected from a catalogue, the information stops. Is it not about time that data was available to store cattle buyers so they could make more informed buying decisions?"

He suggested introducing a system into marts which provided buyers with concise visible information on a number of relevant key points which could influence purchases.

He said: "The mart is a fast decision environment where buyers are comparing many cattle quickly under pressure. Anything that can't be absorbed rapidly becomes invisible. So if performance data is buried on catalogue, inconsistent or too technical to translate quickly, it won't influence buyers.

Specialist finishers buy outcomes. They're paid on daily liveweight gain and consistency, days to finish, feed efficiency, spec, reduced health risk, and uniformity of batches.
Mr Donaldson asked what helps a feeder predict those outcomes more reliably when they're buying store cattle.

READ NOW: New sheep genotyping service launched

Store cattle

" A visual appraisal is not the enemy – it is essential, so it isn't about turning the mark into a spreadsheet, it is about giving buyers a sharper picture. What they can see - plus what the figures predict," he said.

Ìý"So we need a communication upgrade, not an ideology shift. Completing the data circle means performance information travels from breeder to sale to feeder and it becomes feedback into future selecting and buying. The circle closes when commercial buyers can see clear cues at the point of sale.

If it can't be understood in around 10 seconds, it won't change the bidding behaviour. Instead of showing every EBV on screen, show what changes the decision. An index band, a growth band, a carcase outcome, relevant health issues and a band based on accuracy. ÌýÌý

Many markets already have screens and flow systems. We're not reinventing the sale - Ìýupgrading what's visible.

Mr Donadlson suggested sensible pathway forward would be to try Ìýa pilot on selected sales and then publish post sale reporting linking bands to the prices achieved. So premium signals become visible.

"Once buyers use it and the sellers, we're off," he said.

READ NOW: Farmers reject claim that Brexit has given farmers more control

More on Livestock

OPINION: A stubborn ewe and a short fuse – lambing time fun

OPINION: A stubborn ewe and a short fuse – lambing time fun

Livestock specialist Katie Fallon discusses the highs and lows of working with sheep

clock 21 April 2026 • 2 min read
Livestock farmers set to share their environmental journey

Livestock farmers set to share their environmental journey

New dataset hopes to show how much has been achieved on road to net zero

clock 21 April 2026 • 2 min read
OPINION: Stepping into the rostrum made clear that the job is best left to the professionals

OPINION: Stepping into the rostrum made clear that the job is best left to the professionals

A keen market attender, livestock reporter Ellie Layton gave auctioneering a go in a YFC competition this weekend, giving her a whole new appreciation for what it takes to be an auctioneer

clock 20 April 2026 • 2 min read