Track and trace with QR workflows that connect packaging to market reality
AIQR helps brands move beyond static codes and disconnected dashboards. With QR-linked track-and-trace workflows, you can connect packaging, scan events, and downstream visibility to better understand how products move through production, distribution, and market engagement.
What track and trace should actually do
Track and trace should not just mean “we printed a code.” It should help answer where products were produced, how they moved through channels, whether scan behavior matches expected markets, and which batches, lots, or product groups are affected.
That is what turns traceability from a checkbox into an operating capability.
How AIQR approaches track and trace
AIQR connects QR experiences with operational logic. That can include unit or batch-linked QR identities, scan event capture, route-to-market visibility signals, product, box, or shipment-linked workflows where relevant, and downstream intelligence from channel and consumer interactions.
Business outcomes
Better route-to-market visibility, faster response to anomalies, stronger recall and batch intelligence, and shared value beyond compliance. Track and trace can also support engagement, education, and channel programs instead of existing only for audits.
Best fit for
- •Supplements
- •Food & beverage
- •Pharma-adjacent workflows
- •Export products
- •Products with distributor complexity
See it on your own product
AIQR works best when you can see the flow end to end — QR, packaging, scan experience, and downstream business logic.
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FAQs
Is AIQR a full compliance platform?
AIQR supports traceability, serialization-friendly workflows, and downstream visibility, but exact compliance claims depend on the implementation and industry context.
Can track and trace work with printed QR codes?
Yes. Printed QR codes can be an effective traceability surface when connected to the right data and workflows.
Does track and trace require special scanners?
Not always. Some workflows can use smartphone scans, while others may involve industrial or operational scanning setups.