By Tammie Van Buren, Compliance Manager, SQFI

Recall prevention means embedding food safety throughout your operations so those failures never reach the customer through means of supplier approval, environmental monitoring, allergen control, and corrective-action management.

Product recalls are costly and damaging to retailer brand reputations, and many times are preventable with the right  food safety systems in place. Recall risks can be reduced through a certified, system-based approach integrating supplier management, environmental monitoring, and allergen controls under the Safe Quality Food (SQF) Program.

Product recalls are every manufacturer's nightmare. They are costly, stressful, and potentially devastating to consumer trust. Yet most recalls are preventable. The key lies in having a certified, system-based approach that connects suppliers and sanitation under one continuous improvement framework.

That's where the SQF Program makes all the difference. Whether you manage a small production facility or a global food brand, SQF certification provides a proven, risk-based structure to keep hazards under control and customers confident.

Denise Webster, vice president of food safety at SCS Global Services, and I hosted an SQF365 digital seminar, "Avoiding Recalls: Supplier Management, EMP, and Allergen Controls."

As Webster explains, "The very roots of our company, and of the SQF system, are in prevention. It's about building food safety into the culture, not inspecting it at the end."

What is Recall Prevention and Why It Matters

A recall happens when a product in the marketplace is found unsafe or improperly labeled, often due to lapses in supplier controls, sanitation, or allergen management. Recall prevention means embedding food safety throughout your operations so those failures never reach the customer. The SQF Food Safety Codes operationalizes this through its modular system: supplier approval, environmental monitoring, allergen control, and corrective-action management.

Reasons You Need to Know How to Avoid Recalls
  1. Protect your brand reputation: One recall can erase years of goodwill.
  2. Comply with global standards: SQF is recognized by the Global Food Safety Initiative (GFSI) and accepted by leading retailers worldwide.
  3. Save money and time: Preventing issues upstream avoids downtime, product loss, and rework.
  4. Retain buyer trust: "Retailers expect proof, not promises," Webster says. "SQF gives them that confidence because it verifies that your controls are not only written but working."

Step-by-Step Instructions to Avoid Recalls

Step 1: Build a Robust Supplier Management Program

SQF's clause 2.3.4 Approved Supplier Program sets the tone: know your suppliers and verify their food safety performance.

  1. Start with verification, not assumptions: Use only SQF-certified or equivalently benchmarked suppliers whenever possible.
  2. Document everything: Maintain an updated list of approved suppliers, raw materials, and certifications.
  3. Conduct risk-based evaluations: Frequency and depth of review should match the risk level of the ingredient or material.
  4. Establish change-notification protocols: Require suppliers to report ingredient substitutions or process changes immediately.
  5. Communicate proactively: Supplier non-conformance reports and corrective actions should flow through a defined SQF-aligned process.

Webster noted, "Visibility into the supply chain is half the battle. SQF gives companies a language and structure to manage that visibility."

Step 2: Strengthen Your Environmental Monitoring Program

An environmental monitoring program, required under SQF clause 2.4.8 Environmental Monitoring, acts as your facility's early-warning system for potential contamination.

  1. Map your zones: Define and label areas by risk level, Zone 1 (product contact) through Zone 4 (non-production).
  2. Create a written sampling plan: Include locations, frequency, test methods, and pathogens of concern, such as Listeria Monocytogenes or Salmonella.
  3. Train and calibrate: Teams must know proper swabbing, labeling, and documentation techniques.
  4. Trend your data: Use results to identify recurring hotspots or seasonal patterns.
  5. Respond quickly: A positive environmental result should trigger root-cause analysis, sanitation verification, and documented corrective actions per SQF guidelines.

"An environmental monitoring program without actionable follow-up is just paperwork," Webster emphasized. "SQF turns that data into accountability."

Step 3: Master Allergen Controls

Undeclared allergens are one of the top causes of food recalls. SQF dedicates clause 2.8.1 Allergen Management to preventing cross-contact and mislabeling.

  1. Maintain an allergen register: Know which allergens are used, where they're stored, and how they move through production.
  2. Prevent cross-contact: Schedule production runs strategically, validate cleaning procedures, and segregate tools and utensils.
  3. Validate cleaning effectiveness: Swab equipment after cleaning to confirm removal of allergenic residues.
  4. Verify labeling accuracy: Before release, ensure packaging aligns with the latest approved ingredient list and formulation.
  5. Encourage shared accountability: Production, quality assurance, and packaging teams should meet regularly to review allergen risks.

Webster added, "The companies that manage allergens best are the ones that treat it as a live process, not a static list."

Key Considerations for Successfully Avoiding Recalls
  1. Integration over isolation: The most effective programs connect supplier management, environmental monitoring programs, and allergen control into one SQF system rather than treating them as separate tasks.
  2. Documentation and traceability: Every preventative action must have a record. SQF auditors will confirm not only that records exist but that they demonstrate control over time.
  3. Food safety culture: Leadership sets the tone. Employees must feel responsible for prevention, not just compliance.
  4. Use technology as an enabler: Digital supplier platforms and environmental monitoring program dashboards simplify verification and help sites stay audit-ready.

Adopt a continuous improvement mindset. "You can't rest on last year's audit," Webster reminded. "The best SQF sites treat each finding as a chance to strengthen the system."

Taking It to the Next Level: How to Go Beyond Recall Prevention

Once you've built strong foundational programs, SQF offers optional Quality Code certification that focuses on process variation and product consistency.

The Quality Code gives manufacturers a framework to reduce variation, strengthen customer trust, and make quality a competitive advantage by:

  1. Using predictive analytics to identify supplier trends before they cause quality deviations.
  2. Linking environmental monitoring data with sanitation scheduling and supplier lot tracking to form a complete preventative map.
  3. Setting site-level key performance indicators for zero recalls, zero allergen cross-contacts, and reduced micro-positives.

You can also participate in SQF Unites or FMI Events to benchmark practices and learn from peer sites worldwide.

Alternatives and Enhancements
  1. If your site isn't ready for full certification, consider SQF Fundamentals, a stepwise approach designed for smaller or emerging operations.
  2. Use certified third-party laboratories for environmental monitoring testing to ensure impartial results.
  3. Integrate your SQF documentation with digital risk-management platforms to centralize audits, training, and corrective and preventative actions.
  4. Implement Internet-of-Things (IoT) allergen sensors or cloud-based supplier-approval tools to scale verification globally.
Wrapping Up and My Experience With Recall Prevention

Throughout my career working with SQF-certified facilities, one theme stands out: success comes from embedding food safety into daily decisions. When supplier management, environmental monitoring program, and allergen controls operate under the same SQF framework, prevention becomes second nature.

Recalls rarely come from one dramatic failure; they come from the slow breakdown of communication and documentation. SQF's structure keeps those connections alive, from the loading dock to the packaging line.

As Webster concluded, "SQF isn't just about passing an audit, it's about proving that your system can prevent the next recall."

For manufacturers, that's the ultimate measure of success: safe food, trusted partners, and a resilient brand.

Watch the full SQF365 Digital Seminar

Denise Webster
VP, Food Safety Training & Consulting Services
SCS Global Services
dwebster@scsglobalservices.com

Tammie Van Buren
Compliance Manager
SQFI
tvanburen@sqfi.com