Consumers 'Agree': redesign a success

An unusual back-panel hologram label helps newly relaunched line of hair care products achieve phenomenal sales growth.

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Image might not be everything, but it’s a crucial factor in packaging, especially when a product relaunch is involved. So when Schwarzkopf & Dep Inc. decided to completely revamp the veteran line of Agree® shampoos and conditioners, the Rancho Dominguez, CA-based company sought bold and eye-catching packaging. A larger bottle complete with a back-panel hologram label not only makes the package noticeable, but has also helped boost sales of the shampoos and conditioners by 80% and 55%, respectively. All labels come from Promo Edge (Neenah, WI).

On shelves since the 1970s, the Agree brand has undergone five redesigns in its lifetime. The latest renovation was completed in November 1998 in conjunction with an award-winning formula change for the line’s shampoos and conditioners. Schwarzkopf & Dep decided to throw out everything but the Agree name and start from scratch, a move that’s proved lucrative.

Its first step was to follow the ‘show me the shampoo’ trend in shampoo packaging. Thus, the switch from beige, opaque high-density polyethylene bottles to clear polyvinyl chloride. With the brightly colored shampoo now shown off in transparent bottles, Schwarzkopf & Dep decided to add some flash and sizzle. “Something that would really pop through the formula and draw attention to the bottle,” according to Chris Gagliano, brand manager at Schwarzkopf & Dep.

Getting noticed

The hologram idea originated in-house, says Gagliano. “We had noticed oral-care brands using the effect since mid-1998, and we noticed it had a great effect on the shelf—it had a great ‘pop,’” he says. “We figured we could translate that into shampoo.”

Agree shampoos now sport back-panel labels with a bubble-patterned hologram on one side. The hologram side faces the front of the bottle. It is visible through the shampoo, bottle and clear front-panel label, creating the effect of tiny, iridescent bubbles floating in the product. Spectratek Technologies (Los Angeles, CA) supplies the Bubbles™-patterned holographic material, made of metallized 1.5-mil clear polyester. Promo Edge flexo-prints the back side of the material with two layers of white UV ink, creating a base on which to print product information. Product information is printed in black on the back of the label, followed by a layer of UV varnish for scuff resistance.

Promo Edge also die-cuts the back-panel label into its oval shape, another important facet of the package. Because the new product formula emphasizes vitamins, Schwarzkopf & Dep wanted packaging that would help consumers associate vitamins with Agree shampoos and conditioners. The label shape is designed to visually complement the list of vitamins on the front label by looking like a vitamin capsule, according to Gagliano.

For the front-panel shampoo labels, Schwarzkopf & Dep chose a 2-mil polypropylene label stock from Avery Dennison’s Fasson Div. (Painesville, OH). Labels are rotary screen-printed in two colors and rotary letterpress-printed in three colors, plus varnish. Printing is done on one machine, all in one pass.

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