High-volume retailers set the pace for packaging

Consumer packaged goods companies follow high-volume retailers’ packaging lead as they seek to align with retailer strategies, brand positioning.

Pw 7599 Anacin 2

For consumer packaged goods (CPG) companies, product packaging is a vital marketing tool that is increasingly providing the key differentiating factor among brands. Innovations in packaging formats, materials, and functionality are giving brands the on-shelf impact needed to grab consumers’ attention and make the sale.

In the same way, high-volume retailers have turned to packaging to differentiate themselves from their competitors. “Over the last twenty years, stores have come to think of themselves as a brand, rather than as a place,” says John Helferich, executive in residence at the College of Business Administration at Northeastern University. “When you begin thinking of yourself as a brand, you learn that you’ve got to differentiate your brand to be successful.”

When it comes to retail packaging, this shift, he explains, has transferred the “power dynamic” from the CPG companies to the high-volume retailers, which now demand products and packaging that support their brand and fit in with the shopping experience they are trying to create. “What retailers like Wal-Mart are now trying to do is create the demand, rather than fulfill the demand,” says Helferich. “This is a fundamental shift in the way retailers think about themselves.”

While some CPG companies struggle with the challenge of creating unique packaging formats for each retail environment, others view it as an opportunity. Says Don Finney, production manager for Carma Laboratories, the maker of Carmex brand lip balm and a supplier to high-volume retailers such as Wal-Mart, Target, Sam’s Club, and Walgreens, “We are very adaptable, and frankly, the change has been very exciting. I believe that it has absolutely helped us to increase our sales.”

Retailers differentiate

So how did this shift come about? And how are some of the largest high-volume retailers positioning themselves? Helferich, who previously served as the vp of University Research at Masterfoods, says that several factors are responsible for the change. First, the introduction of retail scanning and loyalty cards gave retailers the data to understand their shoppers’ habits better than CPG companies could. Second, consolidation of the industry into supercenters, warehouse club stores, and “category killers” has heightened competition and has driven the need for differentiation.

“For example,” says Helferich, “whoever is competing against Wal-Mart knows that they can’t beat them on price or efficiency, so they try to beat them by creating a different shopping experience, with a different selection of merchandise, presented in a distinct way.”

Wal-Mart, whose tagline reads, “Save Money. Live Better,” has branded itself around the value proposition—the best items at the lowest price, Helferich explains. To achieve this value, it relies on supply-chain efficiency throughout its more than 4,000 U.S. and 2,900 non-U.S. stores. For the 60,000 CPG companies that supply Wal-Mart, this means providing shelf-ready products with the help of packaging such as corrugated trays and displays that require minimal labor to set up.

In addition, the introduction by Wal-Mart of its Packaging Scorecard in 2006 (see packworld.com/view-22320) has sent suppliers scrambling to evaluate and modify their existing packaging for greater sustainability. Elements being examined include such things as product-to-package ratio, use of recycled materials, cube utilization, and others. According to Wal-Mart, when the scorecard officially launches next month, suppliers’ scores will be used by Wal-Mart buyers in their purchasing decisions.

Sustainability drives change in aspirin pack

 Insight Pharmaceuticals LLC is a good example of one CPG company that made a dramatic change to its packaging to meet the sustainability requirements of one leading national retail outlet. Upon launch of its new Anacin Advanced Headache Formula, Insight was advised that the retailer had reduced the amount of shelf space typically allotted for Insight’s products; Insight was also asked to eliminate the product’s unit carton.

Because its aspirin products had traditionally been presented horizontally in a carton, Insight was concerned that these changes could significantly affect the brand’s positioning and impact. To comply with the retailer’s requirements, however, Insight broke with tradition and presented its product vertically.

“For the retailer, moving our product to a vertical position enables them to slot a broader selection of products,” says Larry Freedman, director of business innovation for Insight. “That’s both a good and bad proposition. For the retailer, it’s all about how many products they can get on the shelf. But it does make it harder for individual products to stand out and get noticed.

“That undercut our efforts to make it easy for consumers to find our product. By placing our product on its side, we had a pretty large surface area that served as a billboard of sorts. That’s why we knew we faced some big challenges going from that to a cylindrical format with a much smaller viewing area.”

As an over-the-counter drug, Anacin Advanced is required to meet stringent regulatory labeling requirements. By eliminating the unit carton, Insight lost the valuable space needed to communicate dosage and drug fact guidelines. It also lost the carrying device for delivering a related carton insert that provided more detail.

To make up for the space lost for copy, Insight specified the EasyTab® extended-text label from WS Packaging Group’s MultiVision® label line. “This was a totally new label configuration that required a much higher level of printing and construction sophistication,” Freedman says. “We wanted a metallic-type finish that incorporated visual elements from the unit carton. But going from a carton stock to a label stock isn’t a turnkey change-out. Especially when the label has to go on a round container.”

The patented EasyTab label design features a pre-curve in the top panel that makes it possible to wrap the label around tight-diameter surfaces. “In order to include all the required text, Insight needed the label to fully wrap all the way around the bottle,” says Paulette Carnes, MultiVision product development manager. “The pre-curve feature is specifically engineered to ensure the label will open and close under normal conditions for the shelf life of the product.”

In addition to life-cycle performance, the prime label had to maintain the brand identity of the original carton, which would continue to be available at other retail outlets. This proved somewhat of a challenge because the material used for the original samples of the metallized label was not available in as timely a fashion as a standard label stock.

Instead, Insight chose a 1.4-mil matte polypropylene overlaminate for the silver-metallized primary display panel to create a tactile feel and matte image. The final base label is a 60-lb white semi-gloss. The finished, split-base, 11-color, pressure-sensitive label measures 2 x 6 in. and is applied using standard labeling equipment.

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