How Blake Mill Grew Bundle Engagement By Focusing on High-Intent Customers
For a brand built on bold, statement-making designs, Blake Mill needed a way to help customers discover more of what they love—without relying on chance.
Lichen Zhang
Jan 04, 2023 · 6 min
Food traceability is more important now than ever. As customers shift massively to online grocery shopping, it’s become essential for retailers and suppliers to include food traceability procedures into their e-commerce operations.
Lichen Zhang
Jan 04, 2023 · 6 min
The coronavirus pandemic has accelerated the need for best practices to help ensure the safety of foods ordered online and delivered directly to consumers. As customers shift massively to online grocery shopping, it’s become essential for retailers and suppliers to include food traceability procedures into their e-commerce operations.
Food traceability is more important now than ever. In recent years, the frequency of product recalls has increased dramatically due to an increasingly complex supply chain along with increasing numbers of global regulatory standards and constant rollout of new product safety rules.
In July 2020, the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) announced the New Era of Smarter Food Safety Blueprint in an effort to reduce foodborne illnesses. The blueprint works towards a vision where any recall would be able to generate a series of concurrent activities across the entire supply chain, starting with the identification of affected batches to their removal and safe disposal.
Maintaining food safety for customers requires diligence by the entire supply chain. However, recalls present a particularly tricky proposition for retailers. Although they’re typically not the ones at fault for product contamination, retailers are tasked with a multitude of responsibilities, from pulling products from shelves to reassuring and notifying consumers.
While many large businesses have the resources to address the impact of a product recall, small businesses are particularly vulnerable to the associated costs. A recall can result in lasting harm to businesses and quickly erode customer trust. No matter the size of your business, having a recall plan in place can significantly lessen the impact of a product recall.
Disclaimer: This guidance does not constitute legal advice. Always ensure that the guidance you choose is relevant to your business, region, product, and market requirements.
It’s important to understand how to navigate through a product recall to facilitate a smooth and professional approach to handling them. Recall plans require forethought and careful planning, but it can be confusing and overwhelming to navigate through recall procedures if you’re starting a food business for the first time.
The goal of product recalls is to remove the product from retail quickly and effectively. Let’s dive into the three fundamental steps that can lessen the impact of a product recall:
Product recall information can come from a variety of sources. Information typically comes directly from the manufacturer but may also come from a regulatory agency as a result of an investigation or when a product is believed to be a source of an outbreak.
Retailers can also initiate a recall when there is evidence of product contamination. As the final point in the supply chain, retailers can have a powerful impact on public health.
When a recall is initiated, product information is vital so you can quickly remove the product from your store and identify which customers purchased the product. To accomplish this, the following information should be readily available and gathered:
As soon as you’ve gathered pertinent information about the recall, you can identify and remove recalled products from store shelves or from your online store to ensure that the recalled product is no longer in circulation. These recalled products should be marked in a way to indicate that they have been recalled and should not be sold.
Now that you’ve tracked down the products using their unique identifiers, you can find which of your customers bought the product.
During a recall, online food businesses have the advantage of leveraging customer contact information provided at checkout, allowing them to quickly identify and notify customers who ordered items from the recalled batch.
Depending on the type of contact information you have for your in-store and online customers, your method of notifying your customers may differ to make sure they get notified right away. Your records should include the customer name, contact information, place of purchase (in-store or online), and the quantity and date purchased.
Preparing a variety of messages for each recall class, divided according to customers and stakeholders, can be extremely helpful during a recall to ensure swift and transparent communication.
To determine if and how customers should be notified, it’s important to understand the 3 classifications of a recall.
The severity of the recall will affect how the announcement is made.
Customers should be notified for Class I and some Class II recalls.
The following information should be provided in customer notifications to assist them with product identification:
There are several ways you can notify your customers. These include putting up notices near your store entry, register, or information center; posting on your store website or social media; or reaching out to your customers directly through email, phone call, text, or mail. If necessary, press releases may also be issued.
The higher the risk and the more consumers the recalled product has reached, the broader the distribution of recall notifications should be. The quantity of the recalled product returned, on-hand, sold, and disposed of should be communicated to the recalling party.
Product disposition procedures depend on the food and the hazard. Ideally, a central location should be established to collect all returned stock of the recalled product. Recalled products should be segregated, properly marked and held in a designated area.
Severe situations may call for the complete destruction of the product. Conversely, an issue such as an omitted ingredient on the ingredient list can be relabeled and redistributed. Typically, the recalling party or the governing regulatory agency will determine the appropriate product disposition. The types of product disposition include,
Product disposal must be done in a manner that complies with local, state and federal health and environmental regulations. Many regulatory agencies have unique guidelines and classifications for waste.
Sample recall notices
USA
Canada
UK
Australia
Freshly is a batch tracking and traceability software designed for Shopify merchants selling perishables or other regulated products. Our mission is to improve food safety and reduce food waste around the world. 🌍
Visit us at getfreshly.io or install Freshly for FREE on the Shopify app store.