Disconnected systems lead to disconnected decisions and in 2026, that’s a risk few food companies can afford.
For years, modernization happened in fragments: a new ERP here, a CRM enhancement there, a forecasting tool, a warehouse module, a traceability add‑on. Each solved a piece of the puzzle, but none addressed the underlying issue.
In a world defined by volatile supply chains, growing compliance pressure, broader assortments, rising retailer demands, and real‑time decision expectations, fragmented modernization no longer reduces complexity, it creates it. Without an integrated data foundation, every decision becomes slower, fuzzier, and more expensive than it needs to be. This is why food leaders are shifting from scattered upgrades to one coherent digital backbone.
Most food companies still live with a silent, costly problem: their data lives everywhere and nowhere at the same time. Product masters vary by system. Specifications differ from what planners rely on. Warehouse data trails behind ERP. Finance closes based on a different truth than operations. Commercial teams see something different than supply chain.
The result is not just operational irritation; it’s lost accuracy, lost speed, lost trust and a business that reacts slower than the market moves. As we put it in our newest ebook for the food industry: “When data doesn’t align, operations don’t align.” And the same applies to commercial and field teams. Fragmentation isn’t an IT inconvenience; it’s an organizational tax on every workflow.
Food leaders are moving toward a unified digital spine where ERP, CRM, supply chain, quality, sustainability, production, forecasting, and field execution all share the same reality. The shift isn’t about technology, it’s about better decisions.
When every team sees the same product truth, the same forecast signals, the same quality insights, and the same execution data, the impact is immediate:
An integrated backbone doesn’t just align systems, it aligns your people around one consistent truth.
Two of our customers demonstrate this shift clearly
Cornelis Vrolijk, operating complex global supply chains with high traceability demands, reached a breaking point with conflicting versions of product truth. Moving to a unified digital platform reduced compliance risk, improved reporting accuracy, and helped quality, production, and supply teams work in sync.
Konings, expanding across sites and markets, realized that software upgrades alone wouldn’t deliver the consistency they needed. By adopting a connected backbone, they created a scalable foundation where operations run consistently and onboarding new sites, customers, or lines becomes dramatically faster.
Both companies show the same pattern: once the backbone is integrated, the whole organization can finally move as one and growth accelerates because friction disappears.
The industry has reached a level of irreversible complexity: more SKUs, more channels, more sustainability reporting, more traceability obligations, more retailer requirements, more volatility and more data than legacy systems can handle.
The question is no longer “Should we modernize?” It should be: “How will we survive without a unified platform in two years?”
ERP on it’s own can’t solve this. Neither can a lone CRM module, a forecasting tool, a warehouse upgrade, or even AI on its own. Only an integrated backbone turns it into one coherent operating model.
AI is already embedded in forecasting, production, procurement, warehouse operations, and field execution. But AI is only as good as the data it draws from. If master data is inconsistent, AI becomes inconsistent. If planning data lags, AI becomes misleading. If quality data isn’t aligned, AI becomes unreliable. If operational data is incomplete, AI becomes irrelevant
This is why AI Agents accelerate integration: they rely on unified data to interpret signals, flag anomalies, validate documents, and coordinate steps across the chain. AI is ready. The question is whether your data foundation is.
Food leaders are converging on a modern architecture built around:
This digital spine replaces outdated, scattered system landscapes and keeps the organization responsive in a faster, more demanding industry.
A digital backbone is not an IT project, it is an organizational one. When all teams operate on the same definitions, the same signals, and the same insights, alignment becomes natural instead of effortful. Then:
This is what disconnected systems could never deliver and why integration should now be considered non‑negotiable.
The food industry is entering an era of platform thinking. Unified digital backbones let companies scale more confidently, collaborate more effectively with retailers, meet compliance expectations with less effort, and deploy AI safely across the value chain.
Disconnected systems create disconnected decisions. Connected platforms create organizations that move faster, decide smarter, and adapt more easily. 2026 is the moment to stop adding more tools and to start building the backbone that connects everything.
What’s your recipe for success in the food industry?
Running a food business today takes more than great products. From changing customer demands to rising costs and digital complexity, the challenges keep piling up. Curious how food leaders like Bolletje and Bieze Food Group are tackling them.
Discover The Cegeka Recipe Book: a mix of real customer stories, industry insights and inspiration; from today’s biggest challenges to the added value of AI, IT and deep food expertise. Download the recipe book here and let your peers inspire you.