The Food Manufacturer’s Checklist for Buying Enterprise Software

A practical guide for aligning stakeholders, reducing risk, and making confident decisions in complex regulatory environments.

Choosing enterprise software is rarely just a technology decision.
It’s an operational, regulatory, and strategic commitment. 

For food manufacturers, the stakes are even higher. The wrong decision can introduce compliance risk, disrupt production workflows, or stall innovation. But the biggest obstacle isn’t usually the software itself. 

It’s the buying process. 

INTRO

What the industry is telling us

Findings from our Digital Divide report reveal key challenges in technology adoption:

%

are more likely to adopt technology that can be implemented in weeks rather than months

%

cite system complexity as the biggest barrier to adoption; more than cost

%

would accelerate technology investment if driven by leadership mandates

%

of F&B leaders say digital modernization now outweighs other strategic initiatives

The lesson: successful software decisions start with clear internal alignment, not feature comparisons. 

Who needs this checklist?

This interactive checklist is designed to help food, beverage, and CPG leadership teams structure their decision-making process so they can evaluate solutions with clarity, alignment, and confidence. 

Use the stages below to pressure-test your readiness before entering a vendor evaluation. 

STAGE 1

Define the real problem

 

Strategic clarity

Many buying teams jump straight into vendor comparisons before defining the actual problem they need to solve. 

This often leads to longer evaluation cycles, conflicting priorities, and stalled decisions. 

Start by identifying the core business risk or opportunity driving the initiative.

Checklist questions

What business risk are we trying to reduce?
What happens if we do nothing for the next 12-24 months?

Is the initiative primarily:
Reactive (audit, regulation, ESG, recall response)
Strategic (growth, competitiveness, digital transformation)
A combination of both

Is the problem primarily:
Operational
Regulatory

Financial

Organizational
Geographical

Practical exercise

Write a 2–3 sentence internal problem statement that clearly explains:
  • The risk you are solving 
  • The business impact 
  • The urgency of solving it 

Decision payoff

Clear problem definition reduces internal debate and accelerates alignment. 

STAGE 2

Stakeholder mapping & alignment

 

Enterprise software decisions often fail because key stakeholders are identified too late. 

Avoid the “spaghetti bowl” problem by mapping the decision team early. 

Identify your core roles

Executive sponsor

Operational end users

Procurement
Compliance or regulatory leaders

Alignment questions

  • Who ultimately owns the business outcome of this decision? 
  • Who will implement and manage the system daily
  • Who could block the project late in the process
  • Where might internal resistance come from? 

Practical exercise

Map stakeholders across three simple dimensions: 
Stakeholder
Executive sponsor
IT/Security
Operations
Influence
High
High
Medium
Impact
High
Medium
High
Support Level
Supportive
Neutral
Supportive

This simple exercise helps surface hidden risks early. 

Decision payoff

Internal alignment prevents late-stage derailment. 

STAGE 3

Define success before evaluating vendors

 

Many teams start vendor demos before agreeing on what success actually looks like. 

That’s how goalposts move during the buying process. 

Instead, define your success metrics first. 

Potential success metrics

Improved audit readiness

Faster product launch timelines

Reduced time to onboard new suppliers
Reduced compliance risk

Key questions

  • What measurable improvement should we see in 6 months
  • What measurable improvement should we see in 12 months
  • Who will own measuring these outcomes internally?

Practical exercise

Write 3–5 measurable success metrics your organization expects from the investment. 

Decision payoff

Defined success metrics reduce post-purchase regret. 

STAGE 4

Risk & implementation reality check

 

This is where many enterprise software initiatives either gain momentum or stall. 

A realistic implementation discussion builds trust across stakeholders. 

Implementation questions

  • What internal resources are realistically available to support implementation? 
  • What systems will need to integrate with the new platform?

ERP lead

PLM sponsor

Supplier portals holder

Document management systems

  • What data will need to be cleaned, standardized, or migrated?
  • What level of change management will be required across teams? 
  • How much operational disruption can the organization tolerate during rollout?

Risk questions

  • What would implementation failure look like? 
  • Where is the organization most vulnerable during rollout? 
  • What assumptions are we making about user adoption

Decision payoff

Acknowledging risks early strengthens decision confidence. 

STAGE 5

Vendor evaluation framework

Many buying teams jump straight into vendor comparisons before defining the actual problem they need to solve. 

This often leads to longer evaluation cycles, conflicting priorities, and stalled decisions. 

Start by identifying the core business risk or opportunity driving the initiative.

1. Scalability

Can it adapt to different regulatory environments (US, EU, etc.)?

2. Data architecture

3. Implementation support

4. Proof

5. Long-term fit

Decision payoff

Structured evaluation reduces emotional or reactive decisions. 

STAGE 6

Buyer confidence self-assessment

Score each statement from 1 (Not True) to 5 (Fully True). 

Statement
We have clear executive sponsorship
Success metrics are defined
All key stakeholders are aligned
Implementation risks are understood
Budget is secured
Timeline is realistic
Vendor evaluation criteria are agreed
Score
1-5
1-5
1-5
1-5
1-5
1-5
1-5

Interpret your score

30–35 High Buying Confidence 
Your organization is well positioned to move into vendor evaluation. 

20–29 Moderate Risk of Delay 
Some internal alignment gaps may slow your buying process. 

Below 20 High Risk of No Decision 
Internal clarity and alignment need strengthening before evaluating vendors.

Confidenceis the decision

The complexity of enterprise software buying doesn’t disappear. 

But it can be structured. 

The teams that succeed are not those who rush into vendor comparisons. 
They’re the teams that take the time to align internally first. 

Because once that clarity exists, the right decision becomes much easier to make. 

Want to pressure-test your readiness further?

Explore how modern food manufacturers are reducing complexity across compliance, supplier management, product development, and packaging with connected digital infrastructure. 

 

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Supplier Management
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Supplier Management
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FSQ Playbook
Dive into proven FSQ strategies.

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FSQ Playbook
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