Walk into most small food businesses and you’ll still see the same setup:
And for years, that was considered responsible.
But under Natasha's Law, that approach is no longer enough.
Most businesses don’t ignore allergen management — far from it.
They believe they’re doing the right thing because:
👉 But here’s the issue:
Having the information is not the same as being able to use it properly.
In reality, allergen sheets create friction at the worst possible moment:
👉 When a customer asks a question
That process might only take 30–60 seconds.
But in a busy environment?
👉 It creates pressure
👉 It slows service
👉 It introduces doubt
And doubt is the real problem.
Under Natasha’s Law, expectations have shifted.
It’s no longer enough to:
❌ “have something written down somewhere”
Now, businesses are expected to:
✔ Provide accurate information
✔ Deliver it clearly
✔ Do it consistently
✔ Do it in real time
But here’s the uncomfortable truth:
Manual systems rely heavily on human interpretation — and that’s where mistakes happen.
Not because people don’t care.
But because:
👉 The system itself introduces risk.
Sticking with allergen sheets doesn’t just create compliance risk.
It also affects:
Every question slows the queue
Uncertainty leads to hesitation
Delays and unclear answers reduce confidence
The system breaks the rhythm of service
👉 And all of this adds up.
The shift isn’t about working harder.
It’s about working differently.
Instead of:
❌ Searching for information
You move to:
👉 Accessing it instantly
Instead of:
❌ Interpreting sheets
You move to:
👉 Viewing clear, product-level data
Instead of:
❌ Relying on memory
You move to:
👉 system-supported accuracy
This is where systems like POSable change the game.
Instead of allergen information sitting outside your operation:
👉 It becomes part of it.
With POSable:
👉 So when a customer asks:
“Does this contain soy?”
You’re not:
You’re:
👉 Answering immediately — with confidence
When allergen management is built into your system:
Allergen sheets aren’t wrong.
They’re just no longer sufficient.
Because Natasha’s Law didn’t just raise the bar on information.
👉 It raised the bar on how that information is delivered
And in a busy food business, the difference between:
❌ “We have the information somewhere”
and
✅ “We can give you the answer right now”
is everything.