Food & Beverage Keynote Speaker

Jaison Thomas. Food & Beverage.

GMP Compliance Doesn't
Prevent Drift.

For production supervisors, QA managers, and operations directors who know that a facility can pass every audit and still have a team quietly moving off standard — one shift at a time.

45-Min Keynote 60-Min Keynote Half-Day Workshop

Trusted by teams at

Michelin· GE· Kraft Heinz· International Paper· Yokogawa· Forest River· Wacker Chemie· Dormakaba· Gordon Food Service· Patrick Industries· Wonderful Company· Avient· Chiyoda· Michelin· GE· Kraft Heinz· International Paper· Yokogawa· Forest River· Wacker Chemie· Dormakaba· Gordon Food Service· Patrick Industries· Wonderful Company· Avient· Chiyoda·

What Attendees Say

100%
Rated It Valuable
92%
Would Attend Another Session
88%
Said It Applies on the Floor

Based on Talkadot surveying

"Let's refocus our thinking about safety that offers a win-win to workers and management. Mental drift is the pre-condition for accidents."

John — Safety Professional

"Key concepts to assign responsibility, create accountability, and measure performance in developing a culture of safety."

Melissa — Safety Professional

"Jaison helps with risk prevention by using indicators to detect incoming accident behaviors."

Michael — Safety Professional

"Great information with real life stories."

Jason — Operations Professional, Gordon Food Service

Built for This Room

Who this keynote is built for.

This keynote draws directly from FDA-regulated food and beverage operations — the same facilities, pressures, and compliance demands your attendees manage every day.

Production Supervisors

Line leads managing speed, compliance, and people simultaneously

QA Managers

Food safety coordinators and allergen control leads

Operations Directors

Plant managers overseeing FDA-regulated facilities

Association Organizers

Conference directors serving food and beverage professionals

← View all industries Jaison speaks to

The Signature Keynote

Pressure.
Overload.
Drift.

Food and beverage operations run under a pressure stack that most industries don't see: FDA oversight, allergen risk, line speed targets, seasonal workforce spikes, and harvest windows that don't negotiate. The GMP is posted. The HACCP plan is current. And somewhere between the third shift and the next customer order, the standard quietly moves.

This keynote gives your audience the framework to name all three conditions before they stack — and the communication tools to act on what they see.

"It's peak season. The line is running at full speed. Three people called out. The temp agency sent someone who's never seen the allergen protocol. The supervisor is covering two lines. The audit is next week. That's Pressure, Overload, and Drift — stacked."

Pressure
External Force

The force acting on the person

The deadline. The delayed schedule. The short shift. Pressure is not always a person. Sometimes it's a season, a contract, or the weight of everyone else's job on one person.

Overload
Internal Force

The force acting within the person

The exhaustion. The lack of training. The multitasking. When cognitive weight starts compressing decision-making, the person is still functioning — but something important is starting to slip.

Drift
The Result

The last condition before failure

"It'll probably be fine." "We've done it this way for years." Drift isn't a decision. It happens when Pressure and Overload go unnamed long enough that the standard quietly moves. Nobody marks the moment it moved.

What Audiences Leave With

They Leave With a Framework. Not a Feeling.

01

A Shared Language

Your team leaves with the words to name Pressure, Overload, and Drift in real time. Before they stack into an incident.

02

A Recognition Framework

A practical, repeatable process for identifying the three conditions. Built around a Gemba walk your team can run immediately.

03

Consequence-First Communication

Replace probability language with consequence language that cuts through and gets heard. The Challenger engineers had the data. They didn't have the format.

04

A Culture Model

Credit flows down. Responsibility flows up. A framework for building teams where people name what they see because the culture rewards it.

Jaison Thomas

About the Speaker

Nearly 20 years inside the facilities you manage.

Jaison Thomas started as a mechanic turning wrenches on C-5 aircraft in the United States Air Force. Then hazardous chemical plants. Then Plant Manager overseeing high-volume manufacturing operations. Then Director of Operations at a heavily regulated food and beverage facility under FDA and OSHA requirements, reporting directly to the CEO.

His methodology wasn't built in a classroom. It was built on the flight line at 3am, in the conference room the night before a launch, and in every facility where the pressure was real, the team was tired, and the standard was quietly moving.

He has delivered this keynote to manufacturing associations, safety organizations, and industrial conferences. Consistently rated among the top sessions at every event.

Working With Jaison

What to expect before you book.

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