M&S betting on customer patience as cyber-attack threatens to ruin 2025’s strong start

A picture


Marks & Spencer was enjoying a strong start to 2025 thanks to a fashion revival and the warm spring weather.That has now been seriously undermined as the retailer scrambles to deal with disruption caused by a massive cyber-attack it first revealed a week ago.At a time when M&S – alongside most big retailers – are pushing more automation on its customers and workers, industry insiders say the retailer’s staff have been forced to return to pens, paper and clipboards to check stock in stores as internal systems have been put on hold.Every second counts now, for M&S’s bottom line and for its reputation.Shoppers report problems with the use of gift cards in stores while thousands of orders made on or after 23 April have been cancelled.

On Monday, it emerged that the difficulties were now affecting Ocado, as M&S’s deliveries of a small number of packaged foods to the online specialist it co-owns, were hit.Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionThe cyber-attack first hit stores just over a week ago, with M&S pausing contactless payments and the collection of online orders last Tuesday.On Thursday, those systems mostly restarted but M&S halted all orders on its website – which accounts for just over a third of clothing and homewares sales – amounting to almost £3.8m a day.As Patrick O’Brien, a retail analyst at GlobalData, says, cyber-attacks can have major consequences for businesses.

“This is one of the most damaging cyber-attacks on a major UK retailer we have seen, the worst since Carpetright last year, which tipped an already very weak retailer into administration,” he says.M&S is a much stronger and larger business than Carpetright and not likely to be at risk of collapse, but the attack is having a direct impact on sales and as O’Brien says, the longer the disruption goes on, the more likely customers are to take their money elsewhere.While most of the problems did not start until the later part of the Easter bank holiday, according to M&S, the attack cut off a run of buoyant trading.What M&S says was a separate incident also affected contactless payments in stores on the Saturday before Easter.Before then, sales had jumped almost 9% in the three months to 30 March, according to industry analysts Kantar, well above the wider fashion industry, as it continued to win over shoppers.

M&S may derive some comfort from the fact that this is not happening during a peak trading period such as before Easter or Christmas, and Clive Black, M&S’s house broker at Shore Capital, said he expected the retailer to recoup any losses resulting from the attack via insurance.“The financial impact will be a zero sum game,” he says.“I don’t believe there will be enduring damage unless they don’t manage to fix it.”“There will be Mr & Mrs Angry from Tunbridge Wells but most people can see in the past decade that M&S has materially improved as a business and there will be some sympathy.This is not something it brought on itself but a malevolent force.

”O’Brien agrees: “Customers are surprisingly forgiving.”
trendingSee all
A picture

Democrats in Congress warn cuts at top US labor watchdog will be ‘catastrophic’

Democrats have warned that cuts to the US’s top labor watchdog threaten to render the organization “basically ineffectual” and will be “catastrophic” for workers’ rights.The so-called “department of government efficiency” (Doge) has targeted the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) for cuts and ended its leases in several states.Representatives Bobby Scott, Mark DeSaulnier and Greg Casar have written to NLRB’s chair, Marvin Kaplan, and the acting general counsel, William Cowen, requesting answers on the cuts.“If the NLRB reduces its workforce and closes a number of regional offices, it will render the NLRB’s enforcement mechanism basically ineffectual, thereby chilling workers from exercising their rights to engage in union organizing and protected concerted activities,” they wrote.The letter noted the NLRB has already been suffering from drastic understaffing and budget constraints, while caseloads have increased

A picture

M&S cyber-attack: when will orders be back, and is my data at risk?

The cyber-attack at Marks & Spencer is continuing to cause chaos for shoppers, with no clarity yet as to when the retailer’s systems will be fully back up and running.Website orders remain on hold for the fourth day in a row, and those affected also include customers waiting to collect orders or wanting to spend or buy M&S gift cards, as well as users of the retailer’s Sparks customer reward scheme.The “cyber incident” began a week ago and has affected stores as well as its online business. Last Friday the company halted all orders through its website and apps.By Monday evening this “pause” in taking orders – which also applies to people who try to buy over the phone – was ongoing

A picture

What are ‘nudification’ apps and how would a ban in the UK work?

The children’s commissioner for England is calling for “nudification” apps to be banned to prevent them generating sexual imagery of children. But what are they and would a ban work?Advances in artificial intelligence software have paved the way for the emergence of “nudification” tools, which are becoming easier to find on social media or search engines.These are apps and websites that produce deepfake nude images of real people using generative AI. This can involve removing clothes, getting an image to move suggestively, or pasting a head on to a naked body. The results often look highly realistic

A picture

‘It’s nearly impossible’: learner drivers on the difficulty of booking a test

“Every time I was looking for a test day, it just kept kicking me off the site,” said Menelik Calvin, 22, detailing the difficulties he experienced when trying to secure a driving test in Wolverhampton.It’s the day before Calvin’s driving test and he’s feeling “nervous” but “ready” as he practises for this sought-after test with driving instructor Donna Michelle Evans.Here, in Wolverhampton, notoriously long wait times are common, and as such it is one of the worst places in the UK to take a driving test. Based on analysis from Nationwide Vehicle Contracts, using figures from the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA) 2023-24, the average wait time for a test is 19.92 weeks, with a pass rate of 33

A picture

Whitehall officials ‘pushing for the Open to return to Trump-owned Turnberry’

Senior Whitehall officials have asked golf bosses whether they can host the 2028 Open championship at Donald Trump’s Turnberry course after repeated requests from the US president, sources have said.Officials had asked senior people at the R&A, which organises the world’s oldest major golf championship, what the hurdles would be to hosting the 2028 Open at Turnberry.One source described the talks as direct lobbying from the government, although others said officials had asked about hypothetical problems with the idea, rather than insisting that it happen.One person with knowledge of the discussions said: “The government is doing everything it can to get close to Trump. One concrete thing is that the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) have been involved in pushing for the Open to return to Trump-owned Turnberry

A picture

RFU opens door to hosting Chelsea if they need temporary home

The Rugby Football Union chief executive, Bill Sweeney, has said Twickenham could host Chelsea matches if the Premier League club is seeking a temporary home – but he believes the local council would attempt to stand in the way.Sweeney acknowledged the financial carrot of hosting an elite football team on a short-term basis and revealed discussions had previously taken place. Chelsea have long since been looking to either upgrade Stamford Bridge or relocate elsewhere in London and in 2017 it was said that moving temporarily to Twickenham was an option being considered.Ultimately Chelsea stayed put and are still exploring their options with either a move to Earl’s Court or the redevelopment of their current home being considered. Should the RFU host Chelsea at Twickenham, it would be a lucrative move for the union, which last November announced record losses and is struggling to break even