ֱ

Why Coles just hired US defence contractor Palantir

22 Feb 2024

Written by Luke Munn, research fellow Digital Culture and Societies

What does the Australian supermarket chain Coles have in common with the CIA? As of February 2024, both are clients of , a US tech company “focused on creating the world’s best user experience for working with data”.

In a three-year deal, Coles plans to deploy Palantir’s tools across more than 840 supermarkets to  and “redefine how we think about our workforce”.

The tech company, named after magical seeing stones from the Lord of the Rings, offers comprehensive software that collects, organises and visualises a client’s data in “”. For an intelligence agency, Palantir’s tools might help  through phone calls and financial transactions; in a healthcare organisation, they might find ways to save money by .

For Coles, the  is to “optimise its workforce” by analysing “over 10 billion rows of data, comprising each store, team member, shift and allocation across all intervals in a day, every day”.

The announcement is  to Coles’ plan to save a billion dollars over the next four years, and follows a 2019 , an effort to build , and the introduction of  and other high-tech security measures.

The entrance to a Coles supermarket
Coles has become a client of Palantir Technologies. Image: Adobe Stock/Daria Nipot.

The Palantir process

What might this Palantir–Coles collaboration look like in practice?

Typically, Palantir first sends out “forward-deployed engineers” to begin work with an organisation’s data, which is often messy, incomplete and fragmented. These engineers work with different branches and stakeholders to bring the data together into a single compatible whole called “”, which contains all the information deemed relevant.

Then the data can be fed into Palantir’s platforms – in this case, customisable software called  and the .


Read more: 


The platforms let clients explore the data through  populated by columns and rows, boxes and lines. The Artificial Intelligence Platform also brings ChatGPT-like language models into the mix.

Users might compare earnings between branches, flag a store that seems inefficient, or identify an upcoming period of high spending based on historic patterns.

All of this probably seems banal, or even boring. It’s certainly less overtly problematic than Palantir’s work with governments and law enforcement, which has been slammed for enabling ǰ, and seen the company described as “”.

Read more: 


However, the deal doesn’t need to be overtly malevolent to be meaningful. A technology of surveillance and control is quietly , moving from front-page news to something ticking along silently in the background. In this sense, Palantir shifts from the visible to the operational, imperceptibly but powerfully shaping the lives and livelihoods of Australian supermarket employees and shoppers.

Optimising the workforce

We can briefly sketch out three implications of the deal.

First, by inking this deal, Coles frames itself as future-forward and logistically driven. Groceries and grocery-store labour become more data, just like the hedge funds, healthcare, or immigrants that other Palantir clients coordinate.


Read more: 


Supermarkets have been under fire over the past year for  through a pandemic and cost-of-living crisis, and accused of .

The Palantir deal continues this extractive trajectory. Rather than paying workers more or passing savings onto customers, Coles has chosen to invest millions in technology that will “address workforce-related spend” as part of a  by a billion dollars over the next four years. Food (and the labour needed to grow, pack and ship it) is transformed from a human need to an optimisation problem.

A walled garden

Second, dependence. As , Palantir clients tend to enjoy the all-encompassing data and new features but also become dependent on them. Data mounts up; new servers are needed; licensing fees are high but must be paid.

Much like Apple or Amazon, Palantir’s services excel at creating “vendor lock-in”, a perfect walled garden which clients find hard to leave. This pattern suggests that, over the next three years, Coles will increasingly depend on Silicon Valley technology to understand and manage its own business. A company that sells a quarter of Australia’s groceries may become operationally reliant on a US tech titan.

A way of seeing

Finally, vision. What Palantir sells is fundamentally a way of seeing. Its dashboards promise  that can stretch across an entire organisation or zoom in to granular detail to locate that “needle in the haystack” insight.

The claim is that this data-driven view is a shortcut to , a way to map every operation, reveal every important element, and identify every inefficiency.

Palantir promises a ‘total view’ of an organisation that allows full control and optimal decision-making. 

Yet the data inevitably excludes significant social, financial and environmental information. The sweat of workers struggling to pack at pace, the belt-tightening of consumers struggling to make ends meet, and the struggle of farmers to survive unexpected climate impacts will go untracked.

Such details never appear on the platform – and if they’re not data, they don’t matter. Will Palantir’s data-driven myopia translate to how Coles views its workers and customers?

By placing Palantir at the heart of its operations, Coles quietly smuggles in several key assumptions: that food is a commodity to be optimised, that paying for labor is a risk rather than a responsibility, and that data can capture everything of importance. At a time of , Australians should strongly question whether this is the direction one of our major grocery providers should take.

This article was republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

Latest