Packaging Diva’s Picks Of The Week: 5/8/08

May 14th, 2008

Baby Formula Bottles Often Toxic
MedHeadlines - Chicago,IL,USA
The chemical Bisphenol A (BPA), widely used to make plastic packaging products, has just been declared toxic enough to be linked to a host of severe …

Bottle Maker to Stop Using Plastic Linked to Health Concerns

Turning off the tap for bottled water
London Free Press - Canada
All food products come in food packaging, Griswold continues, and bottled water makes up a small proportion of plastic packaging. She also disputes widely …

Packaging Green Watch:5/8/08

May 14th, 2008

Americans Trust Green Claims, But Support Government Oversight: Survey
GreenBiz - Oakland,CA,USA
The FTC hearing on April 30 will focus on green packaging terms like recyclable, biodegradable, sustainable and renewable, as well as consumers’ …

SCOR Goes Green
IndustryWeek - USA
… such as collaborating with partners on environmental issues, reducing fuel and energy consumption, and minimizing and reusing packaging materials. …

Wal-Mart drives sustainability, for real.
By Ed Milano
Alex Goldschmidt of Walmartwatch astutely reports the low compliance and low enforcement of Wal-Mart’s touted green packaging rules. Clearly some suppliers have called Wal-Mart’s bluff about the consequences for non-compliance. …

Macy’s Makes Some Green Moves Just in Time for Earth Day
By Deidre Woollard
Next up in the oh-look-we-are-green-too category comes Macy’s which has announced that they will start using shopping bags made in part with recycled paper at its Macy’s stores and biodegradable packaging for online shipments. …

Red, White, Rose or Green? New Environmental Website Announced for …
Emediawire (press release) - Ferndale,WA,USA
The web site documents the 85% packaging waste savings, which include the bottles, capsules, neck bands, corks, labels and large cardboard boxes. …

How To Package Your Products For MOMS

May 14th, 2008

So what does Mom really want on her product packaging? What will entice her to pick your product off the shelf? What siren screams “buy me” as she walks down the isle? The answers are not what you might think. Women perceive products differently than their male counterparts. They have different expectations of products. Women say that they product manufactures don’t understand their wants and needs either. In fact 59% of women feel misunderstood by food marketers. This market segment accounts for 60-70 of all product packaging. So, how do you get this powerful consumer (MOM) to connect with your packaging?

First, see the product though the woman’s eyes not the designer’s or brand manager’s. In my recent research, product attributes such as the shape and color were important to people in the packaging industry but not so important to the average consumer. The mostly highly rated characteristics that both groups agreed upon were convenience, ease of storage, and female friendly elements such as the size of package and handles for carrying.

Second, consider how and where the product will be purchased. External factors can influence the purchasing decision as to how and where a woman shops. Recent studies show that women on average no longer make a big “stocking up trip” to the store. In fact they make numerous short trips to get the essentials for the moment. Today’s Moms are under tremendous time constraints and are willing to pay a premium for the privilege of more free time. Convenience is a big selling factor.

Consider lifestyle issues, ease of use, consumer friendly, time saving anything that makes a moms life easier. The more you can demonstrate in your product packaging these attributes the more you can capture her interest in your product. Any new time saving innovation, a solution to a problem, an unfulfilled need product are all prime candidates for moms.

Packaging a product for the mom consumer doesn’t mean it needs to be in pink packaging either (a color many marketers have decided is female-friendly). In some cases pink works in many others its completely off target. So consider pink where it make sense to the brand not just because you are marketing to mom.

Moms are influenced by other people too, friends, family, kids. So if you can make a packaging connection to the other people in her life you can capture her interest in satisfying her needs. Products that express healthy lifestyles, or balanced living, nutrition and well being are woefully underserved in the mom community.

Finally, it is imperative to get noticed. How can you grab her attention? Make packaging simple, easy to read, use and understand. Get rid of the gimmicks and the hype. More than 89% of survey respondents said they would not purchase a product because it was endorsed by a celebrity, and those that did were embarrassed to admit it. Cause marketing also scored low on the scale of importance in influencing a purchase as did their concern for the environment.

So listen to your Mom buyers the next time you design a new product, bond with them on an intrinsic level not through gimmicks or the current “in” celebrity. Make your product easy to read, use and time sensitive. By adhering to these fundamentals you will have garnered her attention.

For more “How To Packaging” articles visit Packaging University at http://packaginguniversity.com/

Question of the Week

April 27th, 2008

Yikes is this a stretch???

Is the Mmmmm good for you soup good for the environment?

Campbells Earth Day Soup, April 2008

The Packaging Diva asks: is it a stretch that condensed soups are environmentally friendly because they don’t ship water?

How about weighing in with your opinion on this issue?

To use or not to use the #7 Bottle?

April 19th, 2008

Watch the clip from The Today Show titled “Are plastic bottles safe?” here: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032633/

The question now is, how will the plastics industry respond to this? JoAnn Hines, Packaging Diva and Executive Director of Women In Packaging explained it this way. “Two companies, Nalgene and Brita, have developed an entire marketing campaign around refilling your water bottle to save the environment, touting it as a solution to the water bottle sustainability issue. When I mentioned this at the Best Practices Summit, several people came up to me afterwards and asked me about the chemical leaching issue. Now there’s this exposé. Who’s right and what’s a poor consumer to do if we can’t use or reuse water in plastic bottles?”

Latest Responses on BPA

Report Finds Potential Health Hazard in Plastic

More stores pull bisphenol A plastics from shelves

VI Letter to NBC Producers Attacks Misinformation in Today Show Reports


Bottle Maker to Stop Using Plastic Linked to Health Concerns