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Food Business Review | Saturday, May 30, 2026
Food and beverage companies no longer manage risk at a single point in the value chain. A formulation change can affect labeling, supplier qualification, allergen review, compliance and recall exposure before the product reaches a shelf. For executives investing in AI-driven food supply chain software, the test is not whether a platform can collect more data. The stronger test is whether it can turn scattered product information, supplier records and changing regulatory demands into decisions that teams can act on before cost, delay, consumer risk or regulatory exposure grows.
Regulatory change has made that test sharper. Ingredient restrictions, additive bans, FSMA 204 traceability demands and jurisdiction-specific rules now move faster than internal systems. Food companies cannot rely on disconnected spreadsheets, static documents, email chains or shared drives when a banned ingredient, labeling update or supplier issue requires a rapid response. Strong software should help teams understand what changed, where the change applies, which products are affected and what substitute actions are available. AI has value only when it shortens that path from uncertainty to controlled action.
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The same discipline applies to product development. R&D teams may begin with taste, nutrition targets, cost boundaries and brand requirements, while food safety and quality teams must protect compliance and supplier reliability. When those functions work from separate systems, product changes become slower and mistakes become harder to catch. A more advanced platform should connect formulation data with specification management so a recipe adjustment can flow into labeling, approvals, supplier documentation and audit records without repeated manual re-entry. That connection matters because speed in food production is useful only when it preserves accuracy.
“Trustwell links product creation, compliance readiness, supplier control and recall preparedness within software built specifically for food.”
Supplier management is another decisive area. Food businesses depend on broad networks that include manufacturers, grocers, restaurants, distributors and convenience retailers handling more fresh products than before. The software should provide a reliable source of current supplier records, product specifications, documentation status and communication history. It should also support quick outreach during withdrawals, quality concerns, new documentation requests or product holds. In a recall or trace event, minutes matter, yet confidence matters as much. Executives should look for systems that can trace product movement quickly while keeping the evidence organized enough for regulators, partners, internal teams and stores.
The most credible AI-driven systems will not treat automation as a replacement for food expertise. They will combine automation with industry-specific regulatory knowledge, current product data and workflows built for the realities of food production. That balance separates useful intelligence from generic enterprise software. It allows teams to assess ingredient alternatives, monitor compliance movement, prepare labels, manage suppliers and respond to product incidents through one connected process rather than a patchwork of tools.
Trustwell stands out for buyers that want AI applied to the full food supply chain rather than a narrow task. Its Trustwell Connect suite brings Genesis Foods for formulation and compliant labeling together with FoodLogiQ for supplier management, product management, quality, traceability and recall response. AskREG adds conversational regulatory guidance backed by global authorities and its regulatory team, while AI features support ingredient substitution and data extraction from documents. For food and beverage executives, Trustwell is a strong premier choice because it links product creation, compliance readiness, supplier control and recall preparedness within software built specifically for food.
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