How Packaging Can Improve Your Brand
Mega brands provide their consumers with the ultimate un-boxing experience, thanks to their packaging. Product packaging is always on brand, helping consumers to identify it easily. Layers of packaging, whether void fillers like tissue paper, or soft dust bags for shoes or sunglasses, suggest a luxury product. Combined, premium packaging leaves consumers feeling like they have something special as they un-box a product.
Un-boxing is the first physical touchpoint between your business and your customer. A 1992 study found that the quality and decoration of the packaging influences how consumers evaluate the quality and value of the product. The un-boxing experience is as significant as the product itself. A good experience can promote customer loyalty and retention, as well as satisfaction. And with the trend for unboxing videos via social media, it pays to get it right.
But remember that the protection and preservation of your
product are as important as its presentation. Secure packaging will increase
shelf life, minimize spoilage, protect against damage and boost your brand.
Your small business needs that boost to make you stand out.
Keep your products packaged beautifully with these tips.
Color has meaning. There is evidence to suggest that the
cultural use of colors as symbols happened as early as 90,000BC. How we
interpret the use of color varies depending on individual associations and
learned responses.
While it’s not possible to account for all interpretations,
your packaging is part of your branding. As such, your design should align with
your brand, and reflect your product and its purpose.
Big brands use color cleverly. Coca-Cola’s red cans are
iconic. They promise a consistent and authentic taste synonymous with the
drink, in every can. Apple’s packaging is white, which denotes simplicity; this
aligns with its intuitive-to-use products. Its packaging showcases four things:
the logo, the product name, a picture of the product, and product information.
Consider monotone for modern, elegant simplicity;
complementary shades or analogous colors (those next to each other on the color
wheel) for health and wellbeing products; bright colors for high-energy items;
earth tones for natural products or gender-neutral marketing; eye-catching
patterns or contrast prints for stand-out shelf presence. If understated is
more in keeping, a simple white box with a contrasting color sleeve or color
pops is a cost-effective way to introduce a splash of vibrancy with a modern
twist.
Small business packaging that thinks outside the box.
A rigid box – whatever size and shape it is – presents a
multidimensional canvas for your packaging. Contrasting sides, patterned
bottoms, stylized images that wrap around the outside – the possibilities are
endless. And it doesn’t have to be a box. The same applies to bottles, cans,
wraps, and bags: wherever your packaging has a surface, there’s an opportunity
for design.
Insignificant elements of construction such as folded flaps
have great potential. A fabulous small business packaging idea is the
Birdy-Juice Box. The flaps on the box fold out, making it look like a penguin.
Add compartments inside for separate components. Your
product should safely arrive with your customer, looking factory condition.
Limits to packaging design are bare-to-none. It wasn’t so
long ago that innovative packaging led to the ground-breaking addition of a
small plastic spoon under the lid of ice-cream pots. The shoulder design of a
Marmite jar is great. The fact you can store it upside-down allows you to waste
less of the product. Foil-lid utensils, food packaging opening to create
temporary bowls. Packaging can be heat-proof, ice-proof, collapsible… whatever
your product, whomever your target markets, there’s packaging that’s perfect
for you.
Go eco-friendly:
Sustainable packaging has an important role to play. It
helps the producer and the consumer reduce their environmental impact, by
reducing the ecological footprint of all stages of the product’s life cycle.
The world stage, and the ecological and environmental challenges the world
faces, mean that sustainable packaging is not just nice to have – it needs to
be the norm. Using recycled paper stock shows that you’ve given thought to the
environment and the impact of your business on it.
There are several ways you can make your packaging more
sustainable. You could switch to recycled stock components and introduce a
natural design to your product packaging. You could look for innovative ways to
reduce the amount of packaging you use, like wrapping products instead of
boxing them. Or for the ultimate in sustainable packaging, try Kraft’s
plant-based poly mailer bag. Sealed with organic glue, making it biodegrade,
safely.
Cut it out!
Combine your packaging with the product itself, to allow
your consumer a sneak peek of what they’re buying, an example being easter eggs.
Inject some humor into your packaging, like the design concept for Nikita’s
pasta, which displays pasta as hair.
Die-cutting brings a whole new dimension to packaging.
Whether it’s pop-up or punched-out, introducing die-cutting elements to
packaging suggests thought and creativity, and is associated with added value.
It’s a wrap!
Wrapping turns any object into a gift. Unwrapping presents
means happy occasions. A 1992 study suggested that this positive conditioning
means that unwrapping any product creates a predisposition to happiness.
It’s what’s on the inside that counts:
Humble and much-loved bubble wrap was the inspiration behind
the 2020 Nike Air Max. A bubble
presenting the four signature silhouettes showed the iridescent shoes. Food and
drink companies have long been letting their products speak for themselves,
adopting clear packaging so that consumers can view what they’re buying. One
thing many consumers agree, and that is that packaging inserts (pack-ins) add
value. They can be easily personalized, for extra wow-factor, and are a
sure-fire way to make your brand stand out. From a simple hand-written thank
you, to free samples and discount vouchers, your customers will appreciate the
sentiment.
Waste not, want not:
Cadbury’s heart-shaped chocolate boxes became popular during
the Victorian era, when the elite frequently gifted chocolate as tokens of
esteem and affection. The beautiful boxes were kept as treasured keepsakes,
often on ostentatious display.
The trend to enhance product packaging to be an object of
beauty has gone even further. Clever design enables packaging to have another
purpose. Portuguese wine brand Tyto Alba (translation barn owl) has box
packaging that can be used as a birdhouse. Puma ditched shoeboxes altogether in
2010, launching the Clever Little Bag, shoe packaging that becomes a tote.
Clothing brand H&M has devised a bag that can be folded into a hanger.
The shape of things to come:
Coca Cola has maintained its bottle shape and its signature
red, for over a century. Small tweaks have been made through the years. The
shape is so iconic that the bottle can easily be pointed out. Toblerone has its
own, eye-catching distinct shape, supposedly inspired by the nearby Matterhorn
Mountain in Switzerland.
The marketing edge that premium packaging and creative
design provide means that the future of packaging promises to be as exciting as
it is innovative. Call one of our friendly team members today on 813 242 6995
or sales @quickpakinc.com to learn more about the Short Run Packaging we can
offer on corrugated, films, papers, and tapes.
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