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Polaroid pictures a perfect pack

Polaroid prepares for the launch of a global product in a global package. The I-Zone instant pocket camera will also test the company's new regional packaging strategy.

The RF-sealed blister pack that Polaroid developed for global sales of its I-Zone pocket camera is shown here (left) as it will
The RF-sealed blister pack that Polaroid developed for global sales of its I-Zone pocket camera is shown here (left) as it will

As Polaroid Corp. developed its I-Zone instant pocket camera for markets in Europe, North America and Japan, management had a single global package squarely in mind. That represents a significant departure for the Cambridge, MA, company.

"Historically we haven't been as consistent in our approach to packaging," says Craig Stafford, marketing manager in Polaroid's consumer global marketing group. "A core product like our 600 Instant Film, for example, would look different depending on whether you were in Japan or Europe or Latin America or the U.S. That's not the best way to build a global presence."

The Cambridge, MA-based firm plans to establish a single brand image and identity around the world. "It's easier to do that," says Stafford, "if there is a common thread throughout the packaging that people can easily identify, a recurring image that says, 'Yes, that's Polaroid. No matter where I am, that image is Polaroid.'"

Stafford says the aim is to maintain a 70/30 split. "We'd like about 70 percent of the package to be identical corporate-wide," he says. "But we still recognize that you need to build some regional flexibility into the process."

While Polaroid had its entire product line in mind as it formulated its new global-look philosophy, the instant pocket camera represented a perfect place to begin. It's been available in Japan since April '98, though not under the I-Zone banner. It relies on Polaroid's famous instant-camera technology, but it was developed jointly by Polaroid and Tokyo-based toy manufacturer Tomy. Made by Tomy, it produces postage-stamp-sized photos; a later-generation camera will produce photo stickers. Kids in Japan are wild about the camera, says Vicki Thomas, marketing leader in Polaroid's newly established kids category.

It didn't take long for Polaroid marketers in Cambridge to realize the camera's potential outside of Japan. It also made them realize that kids were an untapped market for Polaroid products. So the company has established a whole new division aimed at creating new products or modifying existing ones specifically for 8- to 17-year-olds. They also came up with an overarching brand identity for this kid-oriented line: Polaroid I-Zone. The instant pocket camera is just the first of many I-Zone products planned.

Seeking a global look

Underpinning the new I-Zone line in the most fundamental way was packaging designed for markets around the world. Assisting Polaroid on design was The Sterling Group (New York, NY).

As Polaroid marketer Thomas puts it, "The aim from the start was one package for a global marketplace. But achieving it took a lot of work by the packaging team to develop something that all the different regions agreed to. Naturally, they have different requirements and emphases. So upfront you try to arrive at a 'brief,' something that outlines what you're aiming to do, what your positioning is, your target markets, and the look and feel you want. The brief is a document that the packaging folks, both graphics and structural, can execute against. It takes iteration upon iteration upon iteration to get where you want, especially when the final design of the camera is still in development."

Thomas emphasizes that the drive for a global look was about more than image. Cost considerations were an influence, too.

"There's a tremendous amount of cost in the system when you have more packaging varieties than are necessary," says Thomas. "From a corporate standpoint, a key strategy for us is to limit inventory through global product development and equally global packaging."

Among the challenges Polaroid faced was that the Japanese market already had the Tomy package in place. It's a blister-pack, thermoformed of polyvinyl chloride, with "tabs" around the perimeter. The camera, film and batteries fit in the blister, and then the paperboard is slid into the tabs to hold everything in place.

Unfortunately, the word "Polaroid" is barely visible on it. and since the I-Zone concept hadn't even been conceived when the Japanese camera was introduced, there isn't a whiff of that word to be found. As Polaroid developed its I-Zone package for the global marketplace, it quickly became apparent that the Japanese market, with a successful product and package already in place, would have to be handled differently.

The solution for Polaroid was to position the I-Zone camera as a second-generation version. That lets Polaroid leave the packaging alone for the Tomy-brand camera originally marketed in Japan. The second-generation I-Zone camera aimed at the global marketplace, including Japan, is being differentiated by adding certain features--indoor/outdoor capability and a greater picture-taking range--to make it an I-Zone, as opposed to a Tomy, product.

With that settled, Polaroid turned to the task of designing an I-Zone instant pocket camera package suitable for a global marketplace. Like the package used by Tomy, it's a clear blister pack, thermoformed of 20-mil PVC sheet, with a paperboard insert. But it's a different style of blister pack. Operators load camera, batteries and film into the blister, put the paperboard insert on top, and then complete the package by radio-frequency sealing an unformed PVC piece to the formed blister.

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