Two of the most commonly mixed-up terms are product data sheets and technical data sheets. They sound similar – and both play an essential role in food supply chains – but they serve different purposes. Add in safety data sheets for food products, and the picture becomes even more complex.
This blog explains the differences, where each type of document is used, and why clear specification management is critical for compliance and efficiency.
A food product data sheet is a document that provides core information about a product. Typically, it includes details such as:
These sheets are designed to give retailers, procurement teams, and even marketing departments the information they need to understand and present a product to consumers. For example, when a manufacturer wants to list a product with a supermarket, the product data sheet ensures that nutritional and allergen labelling is accurate and compliant.
A technical data sheet for food products goes deeper. It provides detailed specifications that are critical for quality assurance and regulatory compliance, such as:
These documents are often used by technical and QA teams to ensure a product meets required standards. They also support regulatory checks and external audits, making them essential for food safety management.
A safety data sheet (SDS) is slightly different. While most commonly associated with hazardous substances like cleaning chemicals, they are still highly relevant in food manufacturing environments. An SDS outlines potential risks, safe handling instructions, and emergency measures.
Within the food industry, safety data sheets are vital for training staff, managing workplace hazards, and ensuring compliance with health and safety regulations.
Although product and technical data sheets both provide information about the same product, their audience and purpose are distinct.
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Technical Data Sheet |
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Getting the distinction wrong can cause issues — from delays in onboarding new suppliers to risks during audits.
Clear and accurate documentation underpins every stage of the food supply chain. Without it, businesses risk:
As regulatory requirements continue to tighten, from allergen labelling to sustainability reporting, the need for robust specification management is only increasing.
For many businesses, managing multiple types of data sheets across dozens of suppliers is a manual, time-consuming process. Documents arrive in different formats, updates are missed, and key information gets lost in spreadsheets.
That’s why many food businesses are turning to digital specification management systems. By centralising data sheets in one platform, businesses can ensure information is standardised, accessible, and always up to date. The result? Greater efficiency, stronger compliance, and fewer risks.
Understanding the difference between each type of data sheet helps food businesses stay compliant, efficient and audit-ready.
At Foods Connected, we have developed ways to bring these documents together within a single, connected specification – capturing core product data first, and then adding technical information as the product moves further through development.
This conditional approach means suppliers only need to complete essential details upfront, reducing early-stage workload and avoiding the collection of unnecessary technical data for products that may not progress. Once a product is approved, additional compliance and quality information can then be seamlessly added.
By combining these workflows, Foods Connected helps teams simplify specification management, improve data accuracy and prepare for future PLM (Product Lifecycle Management) solutions – ensuring that every step of the process remains efficient, compliant and connected.
Find out how you can centralise product, technical and safety data sheets in one connected system: