Site icon Food Industry Executive

Making Sense of the Food Manufacturing Technology Stack

Key takeaways


When technologies don’t talk to each other, it creates a significant stumbling block for food and beverage manufacturers, causing digital transformation initiatives to fail. A clear view of the stack — what each layer does, what data it creates, and how layers connect — lets executive, operations, and innovation leaders set realistic roadmaps, avoid duplicate spend, and move faster on digital quality, traceability, and AI.

This is even more critical as companies scramble to adopt AI. Deloitte’s 2025 Smart Manufacturing Survey reports that 29% of manufacturers are using AI/machine learning at the facility or network level and 24% have deployed generative AI, with many more piloting both. That only pays off when the data plumbing is sound. 

McKinsey’s 2025 workplace AI research adds: “Almost all companies invest in AI, but just 1 percent believe they are at maturity.” That gap is often an integration gap — data exists, but not in the right system, format, or time. 

Understanding the tech stack from bottom to top

How data actually flows in a modern food plant

Plans and recipes move down

ERP releases a planned production order with product, quantity, due date, and material availability. MES dispatches the order to a line or cell, applies the correct recipe or batch parameters, and hands critical setpoints to SCADA/PLCs.

Events, quality, and genealogy move up

As operators run, MES records start/stop, changeover times, deviations, hold/release status, in‑process checks, and lot/lot consumption. SCADA/historians capture high‑frequency conditions (e.g., temps, weights, CIP cycles). Analytics unifies it to compute OEE and yield and gives predictive signals back to MES/SCADA (such as “tighten fryer temp window now”).

Finance and supply chain close the loop

ERP consumes confirmations, scrap, and consumption from MES to update inventory, COGS, and replenishment plans, and to settle performance against plan.

Latency matters: PLC/SCADA operate in milliseconds/seconds, MES in minutes, and ERP in hours/days. Keep real‑time control near the edge, keep business planning in ERP, and use analytics to bridge them without overloading any layer.

Integration points that matter 

A simple architecture that scales


A “good” food tech stack feels boring — in the best way. Jobs appear on the HMI without typing. Setpoints are correct by default. Quality checks auto‑trigger on changeovers. Downtime reasons are selected once and reused everywhere. Finance closes faster because consumption and scrap are accurate. When customers call, you can trace a lot’s genealogy within seconds.

With a shared vocabulary and a few crisp interfaces, the technology stack stops being mysterious and starts being a durable advantage for quality, throughput, and trust.


FAQ for food manufacturing leaders

Q: What’s the practical difference between SCADA and MES?

A: SCADA is the supervisor and visualizer of equipment in real time; MES is the planner and recorder of work. SCADA answers “what is the line doing right now?” MES answers “what job should run next and did we make it to spec?”

Q: Do we need an ERP if our MES is strong?

A: Yes. ERP owns the commercial truth: demand, purchasing, costing, and financial close. MES runs operations and feeds ERP the facts of production.

Q: Can MES talk directly to PLCs without SCADA?

A: It can via gateways, but SCADA (plus a historian) is the right place for operator visualization, alarm management, and high‑frequency data. Keep real‑time control near the equipment.

Q: Where does a historian fit?

A: Alongside SCADA at the edge. It stores high‑resolution time‑series data (seconds or milliseconds). MES and analytics pull summarized events and features from it.

Q: How do we prioritize cybersecurity without slowing projects?

A: Segment networks (OT vs. IT), use identity for every client, store credentials in the gateway — not in PLCs — and adopt change‑control for logic and setpoints. Build these once; reuse on every line.

Q: What if my legacy machines lack modern PLCs?

A: Retrofit with edge sensors and IO modules, or add a skid‑mounted micro‑PLC that publishes via OPC UA/MQTT. Start with the constraint asset where data drives the most value.

Exit mobile version