The study aimed to scrutinize the relationships between Job Satisfaction and Product Compliance indicators such as Supervisor's Relations, Co-workers' Relations, Nature of Work, Working Conditions, Pay and promotions, Product Attributes, Product Standards, and Product Disclosure. The samples were poultry farm workers from the province of Bulacan, Philippines. In addition to employing random sampling, the research instruments comprised rating scale-equipped questionnaires. The research utilized Mann-Whitney U and Kruskal-Wallis to test the significant difference, Spearman's Rho to test the relationship, and SEM to analyze the structural relationship. The results showed that pay and promotion have significant differences when grouped according to sex, family size, and length of service. Co-worker relations significantly differ when grouped according to average monthly income and educational attainment. Product disclosure has significant differences when grouped according to age and educational attainment. Product attributes significantly differ when grouped according to average monthly income, educational attainment, length of service, and number of training attended. Product standards have significant differences when grouped according to the number of training attended. Product disclosures have significant differences when grouped according to average monthly income, length of service, and number of training attended. Co-workers’ relations have a significant relationship with product attributes. SEM shows that supervisor relations, product attributes, and product disclosures are correlated. Job satisfaction can be enhanced through the provision of higher pay, training, and good working conditions. Future research should be qualitative for a richer qualitative interpretation.