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Traceability in the process manufacturing industry: audit readiness, efficiency, and trust

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Summary:

Traceability in the process manufacturing industry is a strategic benefit. Integrated systems seamlessly connect batches, serial numbers, quality status, certificates of analysis, and audit trails. This approach eliminates data silos and allows for the immediate detection of discrepancies. With clearly defined control points, streamlined data sets, and the robust integration of ERP, MES, LIMS, and WMS, audits become more predictable and recalls more precise. The result is measurably improved KPIs, such as a reduced recall time.

In this article:

Do you still view traceability as a burdensome task? This perspective can become a stumbling block at the next audit or recall. When crucial information is buried in data silos, Excel sheets, or email inboxes, you lack the necessary overview when it matters most: what's affected and what isn't?

We see traceability as a strategic advantage. Properly integrated, comprehensive traceability becomes a business capability. It minimizes risks, enables faster, well-informed decision-making, and boosts operational efficiency. In this way, you not only create security but also build trustful relationships with your customers.

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Traceability: avoid recalls

When traceability becomes critical during an audit or recall, it's often too late for quick fixes. Our whitepaper will show you how to avoid recalls from the start.

What traceability is

Traceability – or rückverfolgbarkeit – is the capability to completely trace the path of products, batches, or units. This includes raw material sources and suppliers, warehouse receiving, production and quality inspection, as well as storage, shipment, and potential recall management.

However, the focus is not on collecting vast amounts of data, but on intelligently linking and utilizing key information. This includes master data, batches, serial numbers, formulations, and certificates of analysis (CoA), inspection results, quality assurance status, and audit trails.

Important: consistent documentation of all events (tracking events) to ensure you always have full oversight.

In practice, differentiation is important: while tracking highlights the path forward, tracing tracks back to the origin.

Together, they form traceability. However, transparency takes this a significant step further: it describes how openly you share this information, for example, in ESG reports or direct communication with customers. Thus, while traceability is the foundation, it is transparency that truly makes your supply chain visible and understandable.

Why traceability is becoming a strategic priority now

In the food, pharmaceutical, chemical, medical device, biotech, and cosmetic industries, companies are currently experiencing a significant increase in pressure. Three main drivers make traceability indispensable:

  1. First, the demands for proof and documentation are rising. In the food sector, traceability is already firmly anchored in the EU General Food Law. The principle is clear: companies must have an uninterrupted ability to track where a product originated, where it has been used, and where it is going across all stages of the value chain.

  2. Second, risk management is transitioning from theory to practice. Recalls are no longer an unlikely emergency but a realistic scenario. Those who manage their traceability processes can conduct selective rather than general recalls. This not only protects consumers but also safeguards your brand and your bottom line from damage. A crucial indicator here is recall time: how much time passes from the first report to the clear identification of the affected batches?

  3. Third, the complexity in supply chains and system landscapes is increasing. Multi-site productions, a growing variety of variants, more external partners, and additional systems (such as MES, LIMS, or WMS) increase the risks associated with interfaces. In practice, traceability rarely fails due to a lack of data but rather due to a lack of continuity.

Industry practice: What traceability must achieve

Traceability requirements vary in practice depending on the industry:

Food industry

The focus is on seamless lot tracking, expiration dates, and the cold chain. The advantage is clear: in the event of deviations or recalls, affected batches can be precisely isolated instead of shutting down entire production lines.

Pharmaceuticals and medical devices

The requirements for serialization and UDI significantly raise the bar. Simple "lot tracking" often isn’t enough. Instead, events related to serial numbers, production, quality assurance, and distribution must be consistently aligned to ensure the highest level of safety.

Chemical industry

Mixing processes, batch splits, transfers, and complex formulations make traceability here a challenge. What matters is whether systems can accurately reflect reality so that employees can focus on their core tasks rather than extensive documentation.

Biotech

Test plans, approvals, and deviation management (CAPA) often take precedence over simple track-and-trace. Deviations must be clearly associated with materials, processes, and test results to ensure corrective actions are effective.

Cosmetics

From the origin of ingredients to INCI verification and shelf life: customer feedback relies on a reliable data chain from the affected lot back to the supplier and forward to delivery.

Batch, lot tracking, and serial number: What are the subtle differences?

A common misconception is: "We use lot tracking, so we have traceability." But be careful, lot tracking is the foundation, not the solution for comprehensive traceability.

While lot tracking groups materials in batches, serial numbers give each unit a unique identity.

You achieve true traceability only when these puzzle pieces form a complete picture. This means identifiers must be linked with quality status, certificates of analysis (CoA), audit trails, and reliable change control.

Only when these elements interconnect do you have a seamless information chain you can rely on.

Track & trace vs. traceability: the difference is in the details

When it comes to track and trace and traceability, caution is advised. While track and trace primarily describe the technical ability to record movements, traceability goes much further: it provides solid evidence of connections. Which raw material batch is in which end product? Who authorized an inspection and when? Which customers are affected?

Without this deeper level of relationship, track and trace may remain operationally useful but often does not provide sufficient security during quality audits. True traceability ensures that your processes not only function but are also verifiable and transparent.

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Audit-ready with Yaveon 365

Real traceability requires an end-to-end system: Discover how Yaveon 365, seamlessly integrated with Microsoft Business Central, securely manages batches.

Achieve traceability in 7 steps

Want to establish traceability in your company without getting lost in complexity? Follow this practical approach to create transparency that truly works.

  1. Analyze current state
    Document processes, data sources, and systems. Identify gaps in traceability data.

  2. Define scope
    Set clear objectives: compliance, recall management, or process optimization. Determine products, locations, and depth of traceability.

  3. Establish checkpoints
    Define stations and responsibilities along the entire value chain to avoid data gaps.

  4. Prioritize data
    Start with a minimal dataset and gradually expand the system.

  5. Standardize data collection
    Use uniform standards like GS1 for consistent collection and comprehension.

  6. Centralize data
    Consolidate all data in a central ERP system and integrate subsystems through existing connections or interfaces.

  7. Simulate and improve
    Regularly test recall scenarios, close gaps, and train your team.

Data & systems: what do you really need?

Less is often more, especially when it comes to data. A solid foundation often requires only a small but well-maintained set of information. This minimal set has proven to be particularly valuable:

  • supplier,
  • batch or serial number
  • date/time
  • quantity
  • item master
  • storage location

With these few points, you can already react precisely in case of an emergency and narrow down problems.

Of course, there are data that go beyond the necessary and offer real added value. Process parameters like temperature data, in-process controls, test results, or quality approvals significantly increase accuracy.

It is worth a deliberate look: Collect this additional information where it enhances product safety or assists you in root cause analysis.

From a technical standpoint, a robust core is essential. Your ERP system should serve as the “single source of truth” – the central place for master data, batches, and status reports, seamlessly integrated with your laboratory and production systems.

In the Microsoft environment, many companies rely on Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central. Terms like “ERP traceability” should definitely be on the agenda of your architectural planning.

KPIs: making progress visible

Traceability proves to be more than just a technical function. It becomes a genuine strength when its impact is measurable.

But which key metrics truly matter? The focus is on recall time and recall costs per incident. Other important indicators include quality audit results, error rates in your data, and quality metrics like scrap rate and first pass yield.

The objective is clear: if recall time decreases, the recall scope can be more precisely defined, and audit deviations are reduced, traceability makes a tangible contribution to increased safety and efficiency in your business.

Common mistakes in traceability

Why do projects often encounter issues? The reasons are often internal: unclear responsibilities, neglected master data maintenance, or an overloaded data model without clear quality standards. There's also frequently a lack of seamless integration between ERP and MES/LIMS, or crucial scenarios like recalls are simply never rehearsed.

However, you can counteract these issues with clear actions:

  • Establish governance: Ensure clear accountability.
  • Set priorities: Focus on the essentials (minimal set).
  • Stabilize interfaces: Ensure smooth system communication early on.
  • Create routine: Make training and simulations a regular part of your daily routine.

Are you ready for the quality audit? Your 10-point checklist

  • Comprehensive documentation: Do you reliably document batch and serial numbers at each control point?
  • Linked supplier data: Are supplier details clearly assigned and traceable?
  • Certificates in focus: Do inspection reports and certificates of analysis (CoA) directly align with the corresponding batch?
  • Transparent status: Is the quality control status – whether blocked or released – along with the timestamp always clearly visible?
  • Complete audit trail: Does your system clearly document the full history of all approvals and changes?
  • Effective CAPA management: Are deviations directly linked to CAPA measures to reflect the cause, action, and effectiveness?
  • Guaranteed shelf life: Are expiration dates and, if necessary, the cold chain precisely managed?
  • Uniform standards: Are your barcodes and QR codes standardized and consistent?
  • Seamless data flow: Do information from MES, LIMS, and WMS integrate consistently into your process chain?
  • Prepared for emergencies: Have you tested recall scenarios and reliably measured the required recall time?
Mockup Whitepaper Compliance Kit

Compliance in templates

Audit readiness comes with reliable evidence. Our compliance kit provides proven validation templates along with support from the validation team.

How Yaveon supports

Traceability becomes robust when processes, data, and systems form a cohesive unit.

Yaveon acts as a reliable partner for companies, guiding them through the entire lifecycle: from thorough analysis and design to implementation and continuous optimization. We bring our extensive expertise from the food, pharmaceutical, chemical, biotech, medical device, and cosmetic industries.

In the Microsoft environment, we create a modular foundation. We combine Business Central with industry-specific extensions developed alongside our process industry customers.

Batch management, quality control, audit trails, or serialization: Our industry-specific ERP solution Yaveon 365 consolidates essential functions at over 850 companies worldwide, simplifying complex processes and fostering innovation. Yaveon stands for solutions that not only work but propel your business forward.

If you want to master traceability instead of just having it: Talk to us about your traceability plan – we identify gaps, prioritize actions, and make audit-readiness and recall capability achievable in manageable steps.

Autor Stefan Klammler

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