Doritos Gamer Packs function on multiple levels

Teaming up with Microsoft to build excitement about the release of the newest Xbox gaming system, Frito-Lay comes up with a one-of-a-kind limited edition package.

Frito-Lay's Gamer pack is a special cross-promo aimed at boosting interest in Microsoft's new Xbox gaming system.
Frito-Lay's Gamer pack is a special cross-promo aimed at boosting interest in Microsoft's new Xbox gaming system.

A Frito-Lay/Microsoft cross-promotion timed with the launch of Microsoft’s new Xbox gaming system recently led to the development of the seriously innovative Doritos Gamer pack. A 7-oz serving of Doritos in a squared-off package made from rollstock on a modified vertical form/fill/seal system, the package looks like an Xbox. It’s also distinguished by a wide open and resealable “door” on its face panel.

From a demographics perspective, the Doritos/Xbox partnership was a match made in heaven, since a key target for both Xbox and Doritos is the 18- to 24-year-old male. But because this promotion was designed to last a mere 35 days, the way in which it was developed and executed is absolutely fascinating.  As David Lestage, Head of Packaging Innovation at Frito-Lay North America, puts it, “Let’s just say it’s not something we have in our everyday portfolio.” This Q&A with Lestage provides a unique behind-the-scenes look at how the Gamer Pack came into being.

How does this package compare to other limited-edition “in-and-out” packages Frito Lay has developed over the years?

We do a lot of these in-and-outs with our brands, but typically neither the time frame nor the budget permits us to develop an entirely new package format like this. We usually make do with existing assets that we already own in plants across the country. What made this project different is that we allocated considerable R&D resources to make it happen. With our strategy of driving a packaging transformation, we saw it as a unique opportunity to hop on board something that paired so well with our brand, could generate a lot of publicity, and would deliver a novel packaging format to the marketplace.

Did Microsoft provide much input?

We tried to learn some of the design language behind the new Xbox, or even some of its features, so that we could fold such things into this completely new package format. Basically we pretty much took what we knew to be the Xbox shape and ran from there. We knew we could make a bag with a flat bottom, but the challenge was in making a bag from flexible film that resembled a box. So we went to a couple of trusted suppliers we work with regularly, equipment fabricators, and after a number of revisions and prototypes we arrived at what we now call the “cuber.” It had to fit seamlessly onto one of our existing equipment assets, and it did, specifically, an Ishida Atlas vertical form/fill/seal machine. The cuber itself was supplied by Douglas Machine. It uses smartly positioned heated platens and conveyor systems to induce the folds and the turns on the film.

But Douglas is not known as a player in the flexible packaging space, they’re better known for their cartoning and end-of-line machinery.

True, but we do quite a bit of work with them when we have ideas and we want to try them out on our existing machinery assets. They’re open to working with us as we go through the development process, and this project was just another example of that. Several packaging experts on our team spent a lot of time with Douglas going through revisions and building the cuber from prototype to what we have today. It’s a unique relationship we have with them.

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