Is your audit missing the most critical element?

Making sure your team is genuinely competent and confident isn’t a secondary task; it’s the foundation of a strong, high-performing quality and food safety system.
=Reading time: 2 minutes
Marc Cwikowski
July 9, 2025

Facilities with excellent quality and food safety performance are not defined by well-documented procedures; they depend on well-trained individuals who consistently implement them.

Traditionally, audits focus on infrastructure, procedures, and data, but they often overlook a key element: the personnel. Assessing staff skills and training effectiveness is crucial for a resilient quality and food safety management system.

The human factor

Quality and food safety systems rely on proper execution, which in turn depends on the performance of individuals. Employees monitor control points, perform sanitation, ensure equipment is functioning correctly, and make decisions that impact quality and food safety.

Errors in judgment, misunderstandings, or knowledge gaps can compromise product integrity and pose a risk to consumer safety. Therefore, audits that do not evaluate staff competence risk overlooking early warning signs of potential system failures.

Assessing real capability

A common mistake during audits is assuming that attendance at training equals true capability.

Training records may confirm attendance, such as a sanitation worker at an allergen control session, but don’t indicate whether the material was understood or applied effectively.

A practical audit approach involves more than just verifying documents. It includes observing employees during tasks to evaluate compliance, engaging in informal conversations to understand their knowledge of control points, and performing knowledge checks and practical demonstrations, such as explaining temperature deviations or demonstrating thermometer calibration.

These methods assess knowledge retention and skill application.

Auditing the training process itself

An effective audit also evaluates the quality and structure of the training program itself. It examines how training needs are identified, whether through risk assessments, past non-conformances, or changes in requirements. It confirms whether training materials accurately reflect current practices. Additionally, it reviews the methods of delivery used, considering if a mix of classroom instruction, on-the-job coaching, and digital tools is utilized to accommodate different learning styles.

Equally important is assessing how learning is measured, whether retention is confirmed through follow-up assessments, and if reinforcement techniques such as refresher courses, visual aids, or coaching are consistently used. Finally, the audit should evaluate whether effective feedback mechanisms are in place to continually improve the training program based on audit results, performance metrics, and employee input.

The overall goal is to determine if training efforts genuinely improve daily performance rather than only fulfilling compliance checklists.

Benefits of auditing capability and training effectiveness

Including the assessment of people’s capability in audits yields several essential benefits.

It enables more precise risk assessments by providing insights into how effectively individuals perform their roles. It fosters a culture of quality and food safety by encouraging ownership and accountability among staff who understand their responsibilities, going beyond just following instructions. It also improves the return on training investments by pinpointing areas needing further development. Most importantly, it lessens the likelihood of incidents by proactively addressing capability gaps.

Auditing individual capability and training effectiveness focuses on strengthening what matters most. No matter how advanced your systems or technologies are, they are only as good as the people operating them.

Making sure your team is genuinely competent and confident isn’t a secondary task; it’s the foundation of a strong, high-performing quality and food safety system.

You may also like...

Why Audit Volume Is Not the Same as Audit Assurance

Organizations often view audit numbers as proof of quality and food safety oversight. Internal audits are conducted, suppliers are assessed, and certification bodies report regularly. Yet serious failures still occur. This highlights an important issue: audit amounts are often mistaken for assurance. More audits do not automatically make systems stronger; coherent audits do. The key is whether audits, collectively, reveal what the organization truly needs to know.
Marc Cwikowski
January 5, 2026

Remote Audits: From Emergency Measure to Value Driver

Remote audits, when thoughtfully designed and enabled by technology, shift auditing from a moment-in-time activity to a continuous, insight-driven process.
Tülay Kahraman
December 16, 2025

The Changing Role of Auditors in Sustaining Trust

Auditing will always involve verification. But its most significant value comes from contribution. The opportunity now is to let auditors evolve, stepping into a redefined role that brings insight, guidance, and partnership, helping shape the future.
Tülay Kahraman
November 18, 2025