Organizational Structure and Responsibility

Aligned with BRCGS Food Safety Issue 9 – Clause 1.1.1

Requirement Overview: BRCGS Clause 1.1.1

“The company’s senior management shall ensure that clear objectives are defined to maintain and improve the safety, legality, and quality of products manufactured. The company shall have a clear organizational structure, which is communicated to all relevant staff.”

This clause establishes the foundation of accountability and oversight. Senior management must lead with a clear, well-communicated organizational structure that supports food safety and quality compliance throughout the business.

Aligned with BRCGS for Storage & Distribution Issue 4 – Clause 4.3.1 & 4.3.3

Requirement Overview

BRCGS for Storage & Distribution requires that products moved via cross-docking are traceable and controlled at all times, even when they are not held in storage for extended periods.

Clause 4.3.1: “The company shall ensure that traceability is maintained at all stages, including during cross-docking operations.”
Clause 4.3.3: “Procedures shall be in place to ensure that all products handled, including those not stored on-site, remain under control and are not subject to contamination or substitution.”

Cross-docking operations must not compromise product traceability, safety, or integrity. Even with minimal handling and temporary presence, each product must be accurately identified, documented, and protected.

Key Compliance Objectives

  • Define and document the food safety and quality management structure

    Assign clear roles, responsibilities, and reporting lines

    Communicate the structure to relevant employees

    Demonstrate leadership accountability and commitment

Step-by-Step Compliance Implementation

1. Develop a Documented Organizational Structure

  • Structure Must Include:

    • Reporting lines from top management to frontline staff

      Designated food safety, quality, and regulatory roles

      Role titles, responsibilities, and cross-functional communication paths

    Evidence to Maintain:

    • Organizational chart (signed and dated by senior leadership)

      Job descriptions with food safety and quality responsibilities

      Role assignment memos or HR records

2. Assign Authority and Responsibility Clearly

  • Key Areas of Responsibility:

    • Food Safety Team Leader

      Technical/Quality Assurance Manager

      Production Manager

      Regulatory or Compliance Officer

    Evidence to Maintain:

    • Written role descriptions defining accountability

      Delegation of authority documentation

      Training records confirming role understanding

3. Communicate the Structure Across the Organization

  • Methods of Communication:

    • Staff onboarding and orientation

      Team briefings and internal communications

      Posting of the organizational chart in key areas

    Evidence to Maintain:

    • Orientation agendas and training logs

      Internal emails, team meeting notes, and briefing slides

      Photos of posted organizational charts (if applicable)

4. Review and Update the Structure as Needed

  • When to Review:

    • During management review or internal audits

      Following changes in leadership or operations

      After non-conformance related to roles/responsibilities

    Evidence to Maintain:

    • Dated and version-controlled org charts

      • Change logs or approval history

      • Updated job descriptions and SOPs

Common Audit Findings & Recommended Fixes

Audit Finding Recommended Action
Outdated or missing organizational chart Maintain current org chart and review quarterly
Undefined food safety roles Assign and document clear responsibility for food safety oversight
Staff unaware of reporting lines Include org structure in onboarding and regular training sessions
Lack of evidence of senior management review Document leadership review of structure during management meetings

Auditor Verification Checklist

Auditors may ask for:

  • A current, signed organizational chart

    Job descriptions showing accountability for food safety and quality

    Records of staff training on roles and structure

    Evidence of management review and updates to the structure

Implementation Roadmap

Build Your Structure

  • Define the chain of command for food safety and quality

    Assign and document authority and responsibility

Communicate and Train

  • Share the org chart and responsibilities with staff

    Conduct regular training and refreshers

Monitor and Review

  • Verify structure during internal audits and management reviews

    Update as your organization evolves

Improve Continuously

  • Ensure all roles are aligned with food safety priorities

    Close gaps revealed by audits or incidents

Why Organizational Structure Matters

  • Ensures accountability across all levels

    Clarifies who is responsible for food safety actions

    Builds a culture of leadership-led compliance

    Strengthens audit preparedness and regulatory trust

Support Tools Available

Food Safety Systems provides:

  • Organizational chart templates with food safety role indicators

    Job description samples aligned with BRCGS expectations

    Internal communication templates for structure rollouts

    Training aids for onboarding and role reinforcement
Need help creating your compliance-ready structure? We’re here to support you.