Lenox Optimizes Wine Glass Packaging for Amazon Shipping

A packaging redesign for tableware brand Lenox for its red wine glasses hits the sweet spot, providing both enhanced sustainability and greater product protection for Amazon’s Frustration-Free Packaging requirements.

Lenox’s new red wine stemware package for Amazon comprises two inserts holding six glasses, covered with a paperboard sleeve, and shipped in a corrugated case.
Lenox’s new red wine stemware package for Amazon comprises two inserts holding six glasses, covered with a paperboard sleeve, and shipped in a corrugated case.

In September 2018, Amazon launched a Vendor Incentive Program, also known as its Frustration-Free Packaging (FFP) Program, to encourage brand owners to package their products in easy-to-open, recyclable packaging that is ready to ship to customers without additional Amazon boxes.  

Beyond the promise of reduced packaging materials and greater customer satisfaction, Amazon provided another tantalizing incentive: an early adopter credit of $1 per newly certified unit received by the Aug. 1, 2019 deadline. Another less-inviting incentive was a $1.99 chargeback per unit for those suppliers failing to meet FFP guidelines following the deadline.

Like many of Amazon’s suppliers, when Bristol, Penn.-based Lenox went into e-commerce in early 2018, it lacked an e-commerce packaging strategy. Its products, comprising high-end tableware and giftware—most of it glass—were supplied to Amazon in the company’s retail packaging, which was overboxed and packed with dunnage to protect the fragile products. When sending the product to a customer, Amazon would use another overbox with dunnage, resulting in a “virtual nesting doll of packaging.” Despite the overabundance of packaging, however, breakage was still occurring.


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Watch this video of a virtual tour of Amazon’s fulfillment process.



Getty Images 932627736 W Screen Image Kim HThat’s according to Brent Lindberg, Principal and founder of Fuseneo, Inc., a packaging design company and member of APASS—the Amazon Packaging Support and Supplier network, a group of design agencies, test labs, and suppliers selected to help brand owners design their packaging for FFP certification.

In March 2020, at Amazon’s prompting and with a new Corporate Leader of Quality for Products & Innovative Packaging having joined the company, Lenox began working with Amazon and Fuseneo to redesign its e-commerce-bound packaging to meet FFP guidelines. The result is a highly engineered insert with a fit-to-size shipper for Lenox’s red wine stemware, designed to eliminate product breakage and enable the product to ship in its own container, without overboxing.

Overall, the new package, which will eventually also be used for retail, eliminates 2¼ lb of packaging material, is 83% lighter than the previous package, and has 78% less volume.

Amazon identifies opportunities for optimization According to Amazon’s Director, Amazon Advanced Technology – Customer Packaging Experience, Dr. Kim Houchens, since 2015, Amazon has reduced the weight of outbound packaging by more than 33% and has eliminated more than 1 million tons of packaging material as a result of its packaging sustainability initiatives. Also since 2015, it has sent more than 1.2 billion FFP shipments to its customers, and through its incentive programs, it has increased the number of products certified under FPP to 2 million.

Products that fall under Amazon’s Vendor Incentive Program include those with packaging that measures 18 x 14 x 8 in. or larger and weighs 20 lb or more. To ferret out prospects for packaging optimization, the FFP team conducts portfolio assessments, looking at the size of the product, the size of the packaging Amazon puts the product in, and the number of products sold.


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Watch Fuseneo’s Brent Lindberg discuss the Lenox redesign.


“We identify the most valuable opportunities for driving sustainability improvements based on packaging material weight and packaging volume reduction,” Houchens says. “We also prioritize categories with the most potential for damage, which provides us with another opportunity to delight customers.”

It was through this process that Amazon identified Lenox, as well as several other suppliers of stemware—a style of drinkware having a base, stem, and globe, used for wine and champagne—as ideal candidates for redesigning their packaging, as stemware is one of the most fragile product categories and one that had not seen much FFP packaging innovation. Explains Houchens, “We decided to innovate alongside several brands in this category to demonstrate how packaging that complies with Amazon’s FFP standards protects the most fragile products from damage, even while reducing packaging.”

When Lenox began offering its line of Tuscany-brand drinkware through Amazon four years ago, there were no specific packaging requirements; Lenox would ship product in its retail packaging, which was packed in an overbox with dunnage, to Amazon, and Amazon would add another overbox with dunnage. That’s according to Amy Hughes, Lenox’s aforementioned Corporate Leader of Quality for Products & Innovative Packaging, who joined the company in 2019 to focus on packaging engineering for the company and to develop its sustainability stance.

Hughes explains that when Lenox moved from shipping its products to brick-and-mortar stores on pallets to shipping products to the customer’s home in a parcel shipment, it was a paradigm shift for the company. “The handling of palletized product versus parcel deliveries is extremely different,” she says. “When you’re on a pallet, you don’t have as much drop and vibration as you would have in a single box that’s on say a UPS truck and the potential for that box to get dropped as it gets to the customer. So because of that handling, it made it necessary for us to reevaluate how we’re packaging our products and how we’re protecting them from damage.”

Fuseneo’s Lindberg explains that Lenox’s experience transitioning to e-commerce is pretty typical. “I think there are so many brands that sit in that space that don’t have the packaging resources to isolate problems with their packaging and solve those challenges efficiently,” he says.

The sleeves feature die-cuts that help consumers remove them from the shipping case.The sleeves feature die-cuts that help consumers remove them from the shipping case.Houchens agrees, saying she believes that what keeps more vendors from converting to FFP packaging is a lack of specific expertise related to designing for e-commerce. “Amazon’s APASS network can bring expertise in designing FFP packaging, especially through the lens of sustainability,” she explains. “Additionally, some vendors may need to achieve a certain volume of online sales in order to justify the investment of creating different packaging for e-commerce. Brands that have the opportunity to create omnichannel FFP packages, like Lenox, are able to combine the needs of shelf-ready packages with a great online delivery customer experience. Amazon FFP provides support and incentives to vendors to come up with these creative solutions.”

When Amazon and Fuseneo approached a number of stemware brands early last year about redesigning their packaging for FFP, Lindberg says “Lenox was one of the brands that said, ‘Absolutely, we are itching to design something better. We just don’t know where to start.’”

Iterative process leads to new package direction To kick off the project, Lenox, Amazon Principal Product Manager Brent Nelson, and Fuseneo met to analyze Lenox’s volume of sales through Amazon and to identify its highest-selling products as well as its most fragile ones. “In both areas, we saw our stemware was number one,” says Hughes. Of Lenox’s Tuscany stemware sold on Amazon, its red wine glasses had the highest sales and the largest globe, resulting in the most damage—so that’s where they started. 

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