There are few failures that can be as devastating to a company as a product recall. From a faulty item that doesn’t work to a defective product that poses a life-threatening risk for consumers, there are a range of reasons why a company might need to remove an item from public circulation. While businesses can position themselves to minimize such an event through quality assurance and risk management, every leader needs to have a product recall procedure in place.

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There are few failures that can be as devastating to a company as a product recall. From a faulty item that doesn’t work to a defective product that poses a life-threatening risk for consumers, there are a range of reasons why a company might need to remove an item from public circulation. While businesses can position themselves to minimize such an event through quality assurance and risk management, every leader needs to have a product recall procedure in place.
Discover how digital communication can help your company survive a crisis such as a recall.
A product recall is the process of contacting consumers to alert them of a defective product or unsafe food or drug item and ensuring as many of the distributed items are taken back or disposed of. Often, a recall occurs because a product is subject to failure (or a food is contaminated) which creates a public health and safety hazard.
A recall will also have a corrective action plan which can be:
From food processing to pharmaceuticals to automotive manufacturing to children’s toys, every industry has its own recall management system, regulations, and compliance procedures.
The best way for a business to handle a recall is to have a built-in system to prepare for the possibility while simultaneously employing strategies to avoid recalls altogether. Leaders should use an enterprise resource management system—a digital hub to integrate operational processes, streamline communication, and compile information to efficiently manage normal workflows and swiftly handle a recall if, and when, it happens.
Three ways to use a digital workplace to be prepared for and mitigate recall risk include:
A mobile-first resource management system gives employees—particularly frontline workers who have their eyes on the production process—access to internal data that can help them spot problems with equipment or production and serve as a platform for internal reporting of issues that can lead to recalls.

A digital hub also enables recall document management where companies can store recall information and make it easily accessible. Examples of recall document management include: Consumer Product Safety Commission’s Recall Handbook or the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development’s resource page.
A mobile workplace connects an entire organization from top to bottom. When workers can collaborate with one another across departments, and across levels, it creates a collaborative environment capable of exchanging information quickly and freely. For product recalls this means fast reactions and quicker problem solving, key factors in minimizing the impact to consumers and limiting disruption to operations.
Takata: A Product Recall Case Study
Takata was a Japanese manufacturer with a long history and a good reputation. Started in 1933, the textile manufacturer evolved into an automotive parts company. They were pioneers of seat belt manufacturing and crash simulation testing to ensure the safety of their products. In the 1980s they began to make airbags. By the 2000s they had a 20% market share.

In 2008, reports of airbags exploding when deployed, causing injuries and deaths, led to an initial recall of 3.6 million cars. But automobile manufacturers who installed Takata’s product in vehicles began independently contacting their customers and recalling cars. Finally, an investigation by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration led to a complete product recall. That meant 40 million vehicles across 19 car manufacturers—the largest automotive recall in history.
As of July 2020, more than 75% of these airbags have been replaced according to the NHTSA. But it was more than Takata could handle. It had previously survived a seatbelt fiasco in 1995, but the airbag recall shuttered the company for good. The price tag when all was said and not-yet-done? $26 billion, and growing.
The success of a product recall hinges on fast product retrievals with minimal risk to customers and limited disruption to operations. That all boils down to having a solid digital communication strategy and corresponding recall management software.
A product recall communication strategy needs to emphasize the most important points:
A digital communications platform creates a single hub that contains product recall procedures and serves as a recall document management system. The software must facilitate the three most important factors when communicating with stakeholders about a recall:
In Takata’s case, they broke all three cardinal recall rules. As the New York Times reported, the company discovered potential airbag defects as early as 2004 when they conducted internal testing, four years before they communicated these issues to regulatory agencies.
Every year, thousands of products are recalled worldwide. Navigating the complex compliance procedures while maintaining public trust and continuing operations can be challenging.
Because of this, companies should follow these basic steps for product recalls.
The impacts of a product recall can be severe. A company’s reputation, financial viability, and survival can depend on how prepared they are and how they handle a recall. One study even demonstrated that product recalls are a major disruption that reduces a company’s capability to innovate while dealing with the crisis. A recall also creates an opportunity for a competitor to jump in with a competing product when yours is taken off the market.
The best strategy? To reduce your risk of creating and distributing potentially harmful products in the first place Here are three strategies to minimize the likelihood of defective products.

The best business strategy for a company that processes, manufactures, or distributes any kind of good is to be prepared with a recall plan. With good communication practices, an engaged workforce, and a lean operation management approach, companies can mitigate their risk of a product recall.
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