RedPrairie Study Shows 50 Percent of Brands Are Unable to Recall Products within Hours

Compliance and supply chain complexity plus lack of automation heighten risk to bottom-line and reputation

New study examines executives' concerns about the impact of product recalls on company finances and reputation, in addition to their struggles with traceability compliance and automation.
New study examines executives' concerns about the impact of product recalls on company finances and reputation, in addition to their struggles with traceability compliance and automation.

The average product recall costs $10 million yet a new study from supply chain and retail solutions provider RedPrairie Corp. reports that almost 50 percent of brands are still unable to execute product recalls within hours.

The research examined executives' concerns about the impact of product recalls on company finances and reputation plus their struggles with traceability compliance and automation. Additionally, almost 72 percent of senior supply chain and operations executives are not completely confident in their organizations’ product recall and traceability capabilities.

As part of its research into Commerce in Motion, RedPrairie commissioned Gateway Research to survey supply chain and operations executives from 130 consumer product goods, life sciences, and food and beverage companies to identify their confidence and capabilities in effectively tracking, tracing and recalling products up and down their global supply chains.

“Costing on average $10 million, product recalls are understandably any company’s worst nightmare,” said Simon Ellis, Practice Director, Supply Chain Strategies for IDC Manufacturing Insights. “New legislation adds increasing complexity to the challenge of successfully executing traceability programs. Technology solutions that help to isolate products, proactively issue alerts and handle inventory reconciliation will be key to avoiding the negative outcomes of a poorly executed recall.”  

The report also found that:

  • More than half of executives are concerned about their ability to isolate items with their own supply chain.
  • Coordinating recall issues with suppliers and distributors is a real concern for almost 70 percent of executives surveyed.
  • Only 51 percent of organizations are able to execute a product recall within hours.
  • Less than 20 percent have deployed traceability technology solutions to help fully-automated trace and recall processes.
  • About 46 percent say their companies are struggling to stay compliant with regulations.
  • Almost one-third of executives were most concerned that their ineffective ability to trace items would have a negative financial impact on their company. Almost 25 percent of them also cited negative brand reputation as a pressing concern.
  • About 86 percent are worried about their financial liability if something goes wrong with a product recall process.

 

 “Despite all the challenges and concerns associated with product recalls, what surprised us most in this research was that almost 30 percent of executives claimed to be very confident in their ability to trace items across their supply networks,” said Dave Bruno, Marketing Director for RedPrairie. “Given the low-levels of technology adoption to help automate the processes and facilitate collaboration across suppliers and distributors, this confidence could potentially be misplaced.”

For the full report, visit http://bit.ly/Liq2Xn.

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