$12M

The $12M Deviation Delay

How a fragmented investigation workflow turned a routine deviation into a 14-month regulatory crisis.

14 months Investigation Duration
$12M Regulatory Cost
23 batches Batch Holds
Interactive Story Flow1 / 6
The Challenge
Current-State Chaos
Context Assembly
Governed Intelligence
Operational Outcome
Trust Receipt

The Challenge

Why does a deviation investigation still take 14 months when all the evidence exists across your systems?

A mid-size pharmaceutical manufacturer discovered a deviation in their sterile fill line. What should have been a 30-day investigation became a 14-month regulatory quagmire.

The investigation data lived across three disconnected systems. Evidence was manually compiled into spreadsheets. Approvals stalled in email chains. Root cause analysis depended on two senior engineers who were also managing three other investigations.

By the time the FDA reviewed the case, the lack of evidence lineage triggered a warning letter. Batch holds followed. Twenty-three batches were quarantined. Production slowed to 60% capacity for four months.

The total cost: $12M in lost revenue, remediation, and regulatory response.

The root cause wasn’t the deviation. It was the investigation process itself.

With governed operational intelligence, this same deviation would have been investigated in 30 days — with automated evidence assembly, AI-guided root cause analysis, governed CAPA linkage, and continuous audit readiness from day one.

The Transformation

Dimension Before After Impact
Investigation Time 14 months 30 days -93%
Evidence Assembly Manual, 3 systems Automated, unified Full traceability
Audit Response Reactive scramble Continuous readiness Zero findings

Transform This Pain