Authentic, Safe and Connected Products Across the Supply Chain: Protect Your Brand

Finding and discovering counterfeits, with Steve Tallent from Systech.

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The following is a transcription of an Innovation Stage presented Tuesday afternoon, November 10, during PACXK EXPO Connects.  Watch the discussion here until March 31. 

Welcome to PACK EXPO 2020 Connects in our presentation on Authentic, Safe and Connected Products Across the Supply Chain: Protect Your Brand. My name is Steve Tallant. I'm the Senior Director of Market Development at Systech. And in today's discussion we're going to talk about issues surrounding brand protection, mainly finding and discovering counterfeits. The opportunities to help fight this problem with connected packaging. Our solutions that create digital identities through an e-Fingerprint. I'll go into what that means and how it's created. And finally, how… (can this effort ) bring the power of brand protection to end consumers themselves?

            First off, I'd like to introduce Systech in case you don't know us. We have been around for over 30 years. We are most well-known as the pioneer in productized pharmaceutical serialization, but we've worked across all kinds of industries in consumer packaged goods, food, nutraceuticals, et cetera. We have products on thousands of lines. And what's great is that, we recently became a solutions division of Markem-Imaje, which is a Dover company, which gives us a much bigger platform to operate, and they're well-known for their product identification and traceability solutions, printers on the line, other devices. And obviously, as you can see here that they're much bigger than Systech. So we're so excited to be a solutions division of Markem-Imaje.

            So in this time of remote events, we see and continue to see large amounts of counterfeit products being found in the market by various initiatives. Okay, we'll get into what those are. The economy of a small country or not so small country really could be encapsulated in the amount that is going on in the gray market with both counterfeit and diverted product. And we need to find better mechanisms to discover these counterfeits, fight the fakes, and stop this from being this horrible global phenomenon across all industries. Things are exacerbated right now with the pandemic, because there is so much online commerce. And online commerce is a very large facilitator of the gray market. Looking at statistics, when you look at June of 2020 versus June of 2019, there's a 76% increase in e-commerce sales year-over-year. So, this is really creating a perfect storm of opportunity for counterfeiters in the marketplace.

            So what we want to think about now is, how do we better fight this issue? And we believe that it's in the power of connected packaging, where consumers want to be connected with their packaging. We see things like smart label, QR codes, et cetera, where we have real basic ways of connecting an individual with their phones to brands. But we can see some great opportunities here, especially because when consumers users have mobile apps, they're more engaged and what could be more engaging than having a phone in one hand, your product in another, bringing the two together? That's a very powerful combination. And we want to get into more possibilities there.

            So as I talked about the importance of discoveries of counterfeits, I'd like to talk about this through economies of scale and the various methodologies that brands are employing to fight the fakes. So first off, you have teams of corporate field inspectors. But that's a small group of individuals who are going out physically in the world, maybe doing secret purchases, web buys, really hand-to-hand combat with the counterfeiters. Nations customs organizations are often used. So like in the United States, you can register your products with customs during inspections at various ports of entry. They can look at different containers and things like that. In today's commerce online though, you can have almost micro counterfeiting, if you will, where very small packages, individual units are coming in that are counterfeit. And that makes it a little bit more difficult for customs to do their job. Plus, national borders are large. The internet is wide. Customs can only do so much.

            I mentioned obviously the biggest growth in counterfeit distribution is on the web via e-commerce platforms. So there are various... I coined the term "web scouring". There may be other terms for it. But essentially they are software agents that go out and look at different websites for your products that you've input into their platforms. And they go out and look to try to find illicit online storefronts, selling counterfeit versions of your products and have a legalese and team behind them to have cease-and-desist orders come in and take them down. The only problem there is that online platforms are very flexible. So as almost as soon as an elicit vendor gets taken down, they can regroup and put a new also legitimately looking storefront up. So web scouring is an important part, but it only gets so far.

            Customer education. We see brands themselves putting out pretty detailed overviews of what counterfeit products look like, how to avoid fakes in online stores, in real stores. Luxury brands have done this. I always harken back to about five years ago. There was a big kid's toy called the Rainbow Loom. And it was obviously, it was hot. Everybody needed one for their kids, and it was hugely counterfeited. And the Rainbow Loom put out on their website what to look for in a counterfeit Rainbow Loom, the different printings on the packaging, the different nuances in the product. And all that did quite frankly, was to make better counterfeits because the counterfeits looked at that as essentially a spec to build better rainbow looms. So customer education is important. It's another layer, but it only goes so far.

            In my view, we want to increase the number of touch points, participating in discovery of counterfeit goods to your entire customer base, the crowd, the notion of crowdsourcing. And that really obviously can reduce the per item cost of discovery found. And I think it augments everything. Not one of these things solves everything. But if we can get to almost universal crowdsourcing of brand protection, we're going to get much farther along faster.

            What does this look like? Well, we want to scale up digitally. And we do see serialization as a backbone of digitizing your products and onboarding them to things like the internet of things. We've seen this in pharmaceuticals, we're seeing a groundswell in other industries for serialization. The whole goal is to reduce the time to find the fakes, get them out of the marketplace, and increase the effectiveness of these programs. So today... Let's see here, we have a small subset of the possible people looking for fakes. And we can exponentially increase the digital technologies, widening the aperture of availability of these technologies to your consumers. So let's scale up digital.

            So Systech has our brand protection suite, where we deliver connected and safe products from packaging all the way through to the consumers hands. And this is our... We call it a family crest. And we have underpinning technologies of serialization, traceability, and product authentication that drive value like regulatory compliance, counterfeit and diverted product detection, and ultimately, and consumer engagement, which we do want to get into it and talk about.

            Okay. So what does this look like from a practical standpoint? Again, we're on the line and then we're going all the way through the supply. So Systech has a suite of products that encompass, getting the right messages and codes on products, all the way out to the marketplace, where they can be tracked and traced. They can be authenticated, and consumers can do things with them. And at the end of the day, each of these steps, a lot of data is created and manipulated, and that can then be sent into centralized repositories for intelligence insight. And we'd like to really make it actionable intelligence. And we'll get into some of the things where this consolidated data becomes very actionable for you and your brand.

            But for today's discussion, we are going to talk about our Non-Additive e-Fingerprint, where we can leverage what's already on your product packaging, which is barcodes and create a unique digital identifier for your products. Okay? So, here's a point of sale barcode, a normal UPC code. You have one of these on each and every one of your products. You have a million, 2 million, 10 million of the same UPC code.

            But in industrial printing of making your product packaging, there are different variations, let's say, in the printing process created by the inks, humidity, the line speed, vibration. And when you look microscopically at a barcode, there are going to be little nuances and differentiations, which we've created an ability to vision and derive algorithmically. A unique identifier for each and every one of those codes, it's patented and it's really a compelling way to transform a million of the same barcodes into a million unique product identifiers.

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