Working with Atlas Global Trading Co. on Custom Ingredient Projects

Many manufacturers have ingredient projects that do not fit a standard catalog purchase: private label launches, contract manufacturing documentation flows, multi-plant rollouts, seasonal demand spikes, or a need to qualify alternative suppliers in China for long-term cost stability.

Atlas Global Trading Co. supports custom ingredient projects by combining technical knowledge, documentation discipline, and supplier qualification processes with reliable logistics. This article explains what a typical project looks like, what information is required, and how to create a stable long-term program.

Project scoping Specs & CTQs Supplier qualification Documentation packs Sampling & trials

Practical note: faster projects come from clearer CTQs (critical-to-quality parameters) and decision ownership across teams.

Fit

When to use a custom ingredient project approach

If any of these are true, you will typically get a better outcome by treating your request as a structured project instead of a one-time purchase.

Commercial

Private label or multi-market launch

Different markets require different labeling rules, documents, and certificates. A project approach keeps versions controlled and audit-ready.

Technical

Formulation performance is sensitive

If taste, solubility, viscosity, or stability can change with supplier variability, you need CTQs, trial plans, and stronger supplier control.

Risk

You need dual sourcing

A second supplier only helps if it is qualified properly. We structure trials, documentation and change control so switching is controlled.

Fast decision rule

If your customer can audit you, treat it like a program

If you supply to multinational brands, retail chains, or sensitive categories (infant, clinical, pet, export to strict markets), a controlled project approach typically reduces cost and stress over the full product life cycle.

People

Who should be involved

Custom ingredient work becomes slow when decision ownership is unclear. A lightweight cross-functional setup prevents iteration loops.

Project ownership

Define decision roles early

Team Main responsibility Typical decisions
R&D / Technical Performance targets and trial plan Functional needs, sensory targets, acceptable substitutes, processing constraints
QA Specification and incoming QC requirements CTQs, COA format, testing frequency, release criteria, complaint process
Regulatory Market compliance and labeling alignment Allowed additives, declaration rules, certificate needs, export documentation
Purchasing Total cost and supplier risk management Incoterms, MOQ, lead times, dual sourcing, price review mechanisms

Practical tip: assign one “final approver” for CTQs and one “final approver” for commercial terms. This prevents late-stage reversals.

Execution

Typical project flow

Every project is different, but most follow a consistent structure. This structure reduces risk and ensures the final output is repeatable.

Phase 1

Scoping

Define application, target markets, volumes, CTQs, and required documentation.

Phase 2

Qualification

Identify suitable producers, align specs, review documents, and confirm feasibility.

Phase 3

Sampling & trials

Send samples, run bench/pilot validation, confirm performance and stability.

Phase 4

Commercialization

Finalize packaging, logistics, COA format, release criteria, and long-term supply plan.

Project killer

Changing CTQs after trials begin

When CTQs shift late (e.g., adding extra microbiology limits or new certification requirements), suppliers must re-align and documents must be re-issued. Define CTQs early to keep the timeline predictable.

Intake

What Atlas needs from you (fast intake checklist)

The fastest projects are the ones where the application and acceptance criteria are clear. Use this as your internal request template.

Technical inputs

To match the right grade and CTQs

  • Application category and process conditions (heat, pH, shear)
  • Target function (sweetness, viscosity, preservation, texture, etc.)
  • Known issues to avoid (haze, caking, aftertaste, separation)
  • Preferred packaging (bags, big bags, drums) and handling method
  • Any “no-go” ingredients or label constraints
Commercial + compliance inputs

To plan supply and documentation

  • Target markets (EU, GCC, Africa, etc.) and labeling needs
  • Annual volume and expected ramp-up timeline
  • Delivery terms preference (EXW/FOB/CIF, etc.)
  • Certificate requirements (Halal, Kosher, etc.)
  • Target lead time and safety stock expectations
If you have it

Send your existing spec or competitor benchmark

If you already have a spec (even if imperfect), or a competitor’s material that performs well, it helps align CTQs quickly and reduces trial cycles.

Supplier control

Supplier qualification and risk control

Supplier qualification is not a single step. It is a control system that reduces lot-to-lot variability and protects your customers from change surprises.

Qualification building blocks

How we reduce risk in practice

Control What it does Why it matters
CTQ definition Defines what must not change (assay, PSD, impurities, etc.) Prevents “in-spec but not working” failures.
Document discipline Specs, COA format, certificates, version control Prevents audit issues and import holds.
Sampling strategy Representative sampling and retention approach Supports investigations and complaint resolution.
Change control Notification and approval workflow for changes Prevents surprise reformulation of raw materials or process.
Reality

The biggest risk is not defects—it’s uncontrolled change

Many programs fail because the supplier changes something small that was not considered “critical.” We encourage clients to define CTQs and lock them contractually and operationally.

Documentation

Documentation pack structure

Custom projects often fail at the documentation stage. The solution is a standard pack that is consistent, version controlled, and easy for your customers and auditors to review.

Core pack

Always included

  • Specification sheet (version controlled)
  • COA template + COAs for sample lots
  • Packaging specification and labeling format
  • Shelf-life statement and storage conditions
  • Traceability approach (lot coding logic)
Optional (market/project)

Added as required

  • Halal/Kosher certificates
  • Non-GMO / GMO statement
  • Allergen statement / cross-contact controls
  • Regulatory statements aligned to target markets
  • Additional lab data if client CTQs require

Practical tip: keep a “single source of truth” (one master spec). Avoid diverging versions for different departments—this is a common audit finding.

Logistics

Packaging, lead times, and logistics planning

Custom projects become stable when packaging and logistics are designed with the same discipline as the technical spec.

Planning model

What we align for predictable deliveries

Area Define Outcome
Packaging format Bags, big bags, drums + inner liners Reduces damage, moisture risk, and handling complaints.
Labeling and documents Lot coding, document list, language needs Faster customs clearance and fewer disputes.
Lead time structure Production lead time + consolidation + freight Creates a reliable reorder point and safety stock model.
Seasonality risk Peak seasons and port congestion windows Prevents stockouts and emergency air freight.
Export reality

Packaging that works locally may fail on long routes

Long transit times can amplify humidity and vibration issues. We recommend packaging barriers and palletization suitable for your route and climate exposure.

Long-term

Turning a project into a long-term supply program

Once qualified, the goal is stability: consistent lots, predictable logistics, controlled change, and transparent cost management.

Program controls

How stability is maintained

  • Defined CTQs and monitored trends
  • Change control communications
  • Safety stock and reorder point planning
  • Periodic documentation refresh schedule
  • Complaint handling and CAPA discipline
Commercial transparency

How cost is managed responsibly

  • Clear Incoterms and freight assumptions
  • MOQ and packaging impacts clarified
  • Forecast-based production planning
  • Dual sourcing where strategically needed
  • Service KPIs: lead time, OTIF, responsiveness
Best practice

Treat Atlas as an extension of your ingredient team

The strongest programs involve regular technical and purchasing touchpoints, so we can anticipate changes and support new product development efficiently.

B2B documentation

Primary references worth keeping in your compliance folder

Keep a clean, audit-friendly record of the project and the ongoing program controls.

Project record

Scope + decisions

Archive the original scope, CTQs, decision approvals, and any change requests. This explains why the chosen ingredient and supplier were approved.

Documentation pack

Version-controlled specs

Maintain the current spec, COA template, certificates, labeling requirements, and the documentation refresh schedule in one controlled location.

Monitoring

Performance & trends

Keep COAs by lot, incoming QC results, complaint records, and a periodic trend review that confirms the supplier remains stable over time.

LinkedIn
Verified Atlas Network
Official site of Atlas Global Trading Co.
Group Companies Logistics About Contact Privacy