A growing soup manufacturer* recently introduced a range of vegan soups under their own brand, and also holds contracts to manufacture similar soup flavours for external brands under a white label. The company’s revenues in the last year were $30,000,000.
The soup manufacturer imports their raw ingredients from suppliers around the world, including different types of pre-made stock which are commonly used in these products. The ingredients come with certificates of analysis and the company completes random batch testing once the ingredients arrive in their warehouse.
Did you know?
Vegetarianism and veganism is a growing lifestyle choice. With this dietary choice increasing in popularity it is important that vegetarian and vegan food manufacturers don’t tarnish their brand by providing a product that doesn’t meet the criteria.
Broth bewilderment
Despite a thorough and regular testing procedure, in November 2018 a large quantity of chicken stock had been mislabelled as vegetable stock by their supplier. The error went undetected and consequently, the mislabelled stock was incorporated into a number of different vegetarian and vegan product lines, both under the customer’s own label and external branding. Speculation that the soup contained chicken rather than vegetable stock began spreading online, with customers suspecting a problem with the vegetarian and vegan soups. While the soup manufacturer tried to manage the situation, the allegations continued to increase.
As backlash spread online across various social media platforms, national news outlets also picked up on the story increasing public awareness of the issue. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) decided to test the validity of the claim, and reported that the soup did in fact include chicken. The FDA issued the manufacturer with a written enforcement order for a recall of a number of different varieties of soup. Internal investigations revealed that one of their newer suppliers had unknowingly mixed up a shipment of vegetable stock with chicken stock, meaning all products produced using this shipment had been incorrectly labelled as vegetarian or vegan.
The written enforcement order issued by the FDA meant that five product lines had to be recalled.
Recalling the product
The initial costs for the recall event and product testing were upwards of $50,000. The manufacturer had CFC’s Animal By-Product Contamination Extension in their insurance policy, so they were reimbursed for testing the product to confirm that it did contain an animal by-product (this carried no deductible). The CFC policy also covered the costs of the manufacturer, their customers and retailers all recalling the product. These included the costs associated with publicising the recall event, including a crisis PR campaign and consumer care line, as well as the transportation, labour and disposal of the product. This amounted to $750,000.
In addition to recall expenses it cost the manufacturer $100,000 to source replacement ingredients and re-manufacture the product which were indemnified through CFC’s policy. Immediately following the recall, one of the company’s white label partners cancelled their manufacturing contract, and a second large retailer stopped selling all of their product lines. The policy covered the manufacturer for 12 months loss of sales, their loss amounted to $1,500,000, which was subsequently covered under CFC’s policy.
The event also had a significant impact on the reputation of the brand, and thanks to the rehabilitation costs cover afforded in the CFC policy, additional in app advertising costs were also incurred. These additional costs were also paid for by the policy and provided an effective way for the manufacturer to access alternate platforms, sourcing new customers and changing the negative narrative surrounding their soups online.
Financial protection
Despite the company utilising tight quality controls and procedures, a supplier error resulted in a significant cost to the company and damaged their reputation as a quality soup manufacturer. The supplier was a start-up with insufficient funds in the bank or insurance to afford to reimburse the manufacturer for their error. Had the manufacturer not purchased a recall insurance policy, the impact of the recall would have been a significant hit to their reputation and their balance sheet, threatening the viability of the business.
* The companies and circumstances in this case study are fictional, but the scenarios are realistic and reasonable based on our experience.