Clicky

  • Login
  • Register
  • Submit Your Content
  • Contact Us
Thursday, August 22, 2024
World Tribune
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Food
Submit
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Food
No Result
View All Result
World Tribune
No Result
View All Result

How Food Businesses Can Become Recall-Ready

April 2, 2024
in Food
Reading Time: 6 mins read
A A
How Food Businesses Can Become Recall-Ready
0
SHARES
ShareShareShareShareShare

READ ALSO

FDA New Traceability Rule: Ensuring Food Safety With Electronic Data Interchange

Natural Delights® Celebrates Internal Promotions as Company Continues to Expand

How Food Businesses Can Become Recall-Ready
Side view portrait of female worker wearing mask and holding digital tablet during quality control inspection at food factory, copy space

By Roger Hancock, CEO of Recall InfoLink

If you feel like there’s a new food being recalled nearly every day, you’re not imagining things. Recently, foods have been recalled because of listeria, Salmonella, lead, insects, foreign objects, and non-food grade ingredients. Labeling errors – such as mislabeling of allergens – have also contributed to numerous recalls. 

Recalls from the FDA and the Consumer Product Safety Commission increased 115% since 2018, with food and beverage recalls recently reaching a five-year high. In 2024 alone, the FDA has issued more than 50 food recalls, including chicken soup dumplings, salad kits, kielbasa, charcuterie meats, and more. While food recalls are nothing new, there are growing concerns about how they’re being managed.

There’s no one specific reason for the rise in recalls, but stricter safety regulations from the Food Safety Modernization Act is likely a major contributing factor.

While improved quality assurance programs have helped reduce risks, recalls are still happening frequently. No matter how carefully food businesses follow proper food safety protocols, mistakes inevitably occur. Therefore, food businesses – including processors, manufacturers, distributors, and retailers – must be well-prepared to manage them. 

While many food businesses think they’re prepared for potential recalls – with plans in place, awareness of changing regulations, mock recall drills, etc. – their current standards aren’t necessarily equipping them for effective recalls. They must modify their protocols to become truly recall-ready.

Our industry lacks a recall-ready approach

Over the years – despite proactive efforts from industry and regulatory agencies – recall responses have not kept pace with technological advances. In fact, many food businesses still use manual, disjointed, or antiquated systems that aren’t conducive to effective recalls. 

Currently, our industry faces the following challenges:

  • Organizations act in isolation. Recalls (and mock drills) are being conducted by individual companies, and this siloed approach often causes delays and confusion during time-sensitive recalls. We must shift from an individual company process to a supply chain process to improve communication, transparency, and speed during recalls.
  • There’s no standardized data or recall processes. When businesses use disparate data and processes, it complicates and hinders recalls. Our industry lacks a recall-ready community approach, where everyone across the supply chain collaborates with shared plans and standardized data. Standardized data and processes will better protect foods, people, and businesses.
  • Organizations practice in a vacuum. Mock recalls – conducted by individual organizations – don’t properly prepare employees for collaborative recalls with supply partners, who must work together to quickly remove contaminated products. Therefore, when actual recalls happen, businesses are unprepared, leading to confusion, inaccuracies, delays, and miscommunication.
  • Supply chain visibility is limited. The food industry is still highly manual, which is problematic in a recall. Manual systems – and the incomplete or inaccurate data that comes with them – limit supply chain visibility and impede smooth recalls.

The industry needs a paradigm shift 

Unfortunately, the industry’s fragmented approach to recalls is ineffective in today’s interconnected world. Food businesses should, instead, embrace a new recall-ready paradigm, relying on better collaboration and information-sharing for faster, more complete recalls. 

Moving forward, food businesses should:

  • Leverage tech solutions. Modern tech tools dramatically enhance supply chain visibility and transparency, making recalls more accurate, efficient, and thorough. When food brands use innovative tools to track data from the point of origin to the point of sale, they can better identify which products were contaminated, the cause of the issue, and the tainted products’ journeys. Rely on comprehensive, integrated tech solutions to elevate the recall process, manage recalls more efficiently, minimize damage, and restore brand confidence.
  • Conduct collaborative recall simulations. Many companies conduct mock recalls in isolation, which won’t properly prepare them for the real thing. Instead, organizations should pivot to recall simulations, working collaboratively with companies across the supply chain. Without simulations, brand leaders can’t identify and address process gaps – or feel confident that their employees would know what to do during a recall.
  • Improve communication. During a recall, organizations must develop compelling, succinct messages that inspire specific actions. Messages should be tailored to specific audiences – e.g., employees, supply chain partners, regulators, media, consumers, etc. – with clear calls-to-action for each. Be honest about what happened – and how you’re resolving the issue. Transparency is key to regaining consumer confidence and trust.
  • Share standardized data. To ensure effective recalls, all supply chain partners must use standardized terms and data formats. During a recall, provide clear instructions for proper removal of affected products, along with consumer-friendly product descriptions that help identify impacted items.
  • Vet suppliers. You’re only as strong as your weakest link. Even if your organization prioritizes food safety, if your suppliers don’t, your products, customers, and business are vulnerable. Only align with like-minded companies.
  • Apply lessons learned. After a recall, review your process to determine how you could improve future incidents. Use data to measure responses and action-taken rates to enable continuous improvement.

Food businesses must shift their way of thinking about, preparing for, and conducting recalls. It’s critical to embrace the new recall-ready paradigm, using standardized data and processes, clear and proactive communication, and a collaborative approach with supply chain partners and regulatory bodies. Our industry must abandon the old, fragmented approach to recalls and embrace a more streamlined, interconnected approach to ensure that recalls are being conducted swiftly, accurately, and completely.

Roger Hancock, CEO of Recall InfoLink, is one of the world’s foremost experts on recalls, with experience that spans the retail, tech, data, regulatory, and supply chain. Recall InfoLink, makes recalls faster, easier, and more accurate across the supply chain to protect consumers and brands. 

 

Supplier Catalog - Software - CAI Software 

Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendSharePin
Previous Post

LSU’s Flau’jae Johnson defends Angel Reese: ‘Y’all don’t know her’

Next Post

Keeping the 2-in-1 laptop dream alive

Related Posts

FDA New Traceability Rule: Ensuring Food Safety With Electronic Data Interchange
Food

FDA New Traceability Rule: Ensuring Food Safety With Electronic Data Interchange

August 21, 2024
Natural Delights® Celebrates Internal Promotions as Company Continues to Expand
Food

Natural Delights® Celebrates Internal Promotions as Company Continues to Expand

August 21, 2024
Putting Transparency into Action Focus of 2024 CFI Summit
Food

Putting Transparency into Action Focus of 2024 CFI Summit

August 21, 2024
Statistical Process Control (SPC) is the Key to Quality and Efficiency in Food and Beverage Manufacturing
Food

Statistical Process Control (SPC) is the Key to Quality and Efficiency in Food and Beverage Manufacturing

August 19, 2024
[Guide] 5 Reasons Your Business Does or Doesn’t need an ESOP
Food

[Guide] 5 Reasons Your Business Does or Doesn’t need an ESOP

August 19, 2024
Leadership Development Key to Retaining Manufacturing Talent
Food

Leadership Development Key to Retaining Manufacturing Talent

August 17, 2024
Next Post
Keeping the 2-in-1 laptop dream alive

Keeping the 2-in-1 laptop dream alive

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

What's New Here!

Kamala Harris may be skipping Bitcoin 2024, but the clock is ticking to win back crypto voters

Kamala Harris may be skipping Bitcoin 2024, but the clock is ticking to win back crypto voters

July 26, 2024
Korean research utilises LLM to predict dementia risk

Korean research utilises LLM to predict dementia risk

August 6, 2024
Google apologizes over its Pixel influencer demands

Google apologizes over its Pixel influencer demands

August 19, 2024
Wukong breaks Steam’s concurrent single-player record within hours of launch

Wukong breaks Steam’s concurrent single-player record within hours of launch

August 20, 2024
Mets playoff rotation question lurks during NL wild-card push

Mets playoff rotation question lurks during NL wild-card push

August 2, 2024
Wednesday’s CPI report could mark a change in thinking for the Fed

Wednesday’s CPI report could mark a change in thinking for the Fed

August 13, 2024
MLB legend Derek Jeter’s best business advice

MLB legend Derek Jeter’s best business advice

August 20, 2024

About

World Tribune is an online news portal that shares the latest news on world, business, health, tech, sports, and related topics.

Follow us

Recent Posts

  • Giants avoid risks in uneven practice test against Jets
  • Star fund manager takes leave amid accusations of cherry picking
  • FTX Sam Bankman-Fried former partner Ryan Salame seeks to void guilty plea
  • Noah Lyles gushes over ‘fighter’ girlfriend Junelle Bromfield

Newslatter

Loading
  • Submit Your Content
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA

© 2024 World Tribune - All Rights Reserved!

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Food

© 2024 World Tribune - All Rights Reserved!

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In