E2E traceability refers to the complete, unbroken traceability of a product across the entire value chain – from incoming goods through production, assembly, and testing to delivery. It covers both the material flow (which parts go where?) and the information flow (which process and quality data are linked to which product?).
E2E traceability works in both directions:
Backward traceability starts from a defective product and traces back to the components, batches, machines, and process parameters involved. It answers: how did this defect occur?
Forward traceability starts from a defective component or batch and identifies all affected end products and shipments. It answers: which other units are affected and need to be quarantined or recalled?
Only when both directions are digitally available can a plant respond precisely rather than broadly in a quality event.
Closely connected to E2E traceability is product genealogy – the complete digital record of a product's origin. It documents:
This turns a product into a fully documented digital object – traceable backward for root cause analysis and forward for targeted recall.
The foundation is unique IDs and context-linked events, captured at the moment they occur – not reconstructed later:
Retrospective Excel logs do not reliably meet this requirement.
E2E traceability is built across multiple systems: ERP provides master data and order information. The MES controls and documents execution, links component IDs to finished products, and generates traceability reports. SCADA and historian systems supply raw process data, connected to MES and ERP data through unique IDs.
A consistent data model across all systems is a prerequisite for this linkage to be reliable.
Is batch traceability sufficient? Not for many OEM programs or safety-critical components. Serial number-based traceability with detailed product genealogy is increasingly required.
Is an MES necessary? Beyond a certain complexity, yes. Paper, Excel, and isolated SCADA systems do not scale reliably for E2E traceability.
Where to start? With the most critical product families, clear IDs (lot/serial), and an initial genealogy report. Then expand incrementally to more stations, process data, and plants.