Economic concerns battle convenience for supremacy

Escalating oil costs have an impact on both packagers and consumers, driving new food and beverage packaging trends. But convenience is still top-of-mind for many.

Pw 6080 Diageo

Food and beverage products and packaging are inextricably linked to the trends taking place within the larger economy, society, and consumer culture. In the past 12 months, rising oil prices have forced consumer packaged goods companies to re-evaluate packaging formats and materials, as well as their transportation and distribution methods. At the same time, consumers, hit hard at the pump and watching their wallets, are turning more and more to packaged food and beverage solutions that provide healthful, convenient, at-home alternatives to dining out.

And, as consumers grow more concerned about energy consumption and the environment as a whole, they are increasingly demanding more eco-friendly and socially conscious products and packaging. Research from the Mintel (www.mintel.com) Global New Products Database puts it this way: “More than ever, shoppers want to purchase goods that help protect and preserve the world around them. Manufacturers have responded with everything from recyclable packaging to products that maintain the body’s health to entire brands that support environmental causes.”

Nonetheless, convenience still reigns supreme in many categories, with consumers continuing to place great value on products that offer such ease-of-use traits as portability, resealability, and simple preparation and consumption. Driving this desire for convenience is the consumer’s busy, on-the-go lifestyle, as well as changing demographics. “Greater numbers of single-person households and older consumers are supporting the demand for more convenient prepared foods and single-serving portions,” notes “Rigid Food Packaging,” a study from BCC Research (www.bccresearch.com).

Following are some examples of how CPG companies are addressing these trends through new food and beverage products and packaging.

Holiday season gets greener with 100% recycled materials

Global spirits, wine, and beer producer Diageo, U.K., is moving its portfolio of premium brands closer to sustainability this holiday season with the launch of 100% recyclable materials for its U.S. Value Added Packaging (VAP) gift packs. Diageo’s VAP programs involve pairing the company’s popular brands—among them Crown Royal, Ciroc, Jose Cuervo, VO, and Captain Morgan—with gift elements in elegant, eye-catching holiday packs.

“Diageo is committed to finding ways to reduce energy usage and related greenhouse gases, improve water-use efficiencies, and reduce or eliminate the amount of waste sent to landfills,” says Diageo Brand Technical Center senior vice president Dave Wengerhoff. “The gift elements used in the VAP program, such as glassware, typically require more and/or reinforced packaging to keep the gift secure. Our recyclable VAP program allows us to provide consumers with a great gift item while empowering and educating them to recycle packaging components that would otherwise find their way into a landfill.”

The new gift-pack cartons eliminate the use of metallized polyester-laminated board and use recycled PET rather than polyvinyl chloride for display windows. Each carton includes one of three custom graphics, placed near the product’s UPC code, that lets consumers know that packaging components, including inserts or trays, are completely recyclable. For example, the graphic used for packs with a window on multiple panels and with one or more internal trays reads: “This package is 100% recyclable. All pieces are marked for proper recovery, and window detaches from frame.”

The change in packaging materials, Wengerhoff relates, is in part a response to the consumer’s greater desire for more sustainable products. “Consumer awareness of environmental issues has increased significantly,” he says, “and as a result, people are increasing their demand for more environmentally friendly products.”

He adds that no compromises in packaging quality were required when greening the gift packs. “The recyclable materials produced today look as good, if not better, than the materials previously used,” he comments. “In the last two years, we have made great progress in this area, and 100% recyclability of VAP packaging components has become our new standard.” As of presstime, the Diageo holiday gift packs were just hitting retail shelves.

Mini bottles fuel energy rush

PET is still the dominant resin for food and beverage packaging, with high-density polyethylene having the second-largest share. A study from The Freedonia Group (www.freedoniagroup.com) called “Plastic Containers” notes that “U.S. demand for plastic containers will advance 5.4% annually through 2012 to nearly $32 billion, creating demand for 15.7 billion pounds of resin.”

While Freedonia predicts that growth in resin volume will be restrained by light-weighting and down-gauging efforts aimed at reducing resin consumption, it also notes that “unit expansion will outpace volume increases as a result of consumer preferences for smaller, single-serving containers.”

One interesting phenomena to note in the area of single-serve “beverages” is the advent of the energy shot—a product that addresses the consumer’s hectic lifestyle and need for supplemental energy. Packaged in miniature bottles (most often made of PET), these liquid products typically provide 2 oz of concentrated energy beverage and include such ingredients as caffeine, taurine, and guarana. As of October, A.C. Nielsen Monitor Plus (www.nielsenmedia.com) noted the availability of 28 different energy-shot brands.

Not new, but notable for its 76% to 77% share of the market, according to Nielsen, is 5-Hour Energy® from Novi, MI-based Living Essentials. One of the first in the category, 5-Hour Energy was launched in late 2004 for $2.99 per bottle and employs packaging with a high-end appearance that has set the example for competing products. Recalls Living Essentials creative director Carl Sperber, “We were trying to achieve the look of a premium energy product. The price point was really a strategy for us. The product works so well, we wanted people to understand that it is worth the money.”

Primary packaging is a 2-oz Boston round-style PET bottle (from a proprietary supplier) that Sperber says was chosen for its convenient, portable size and its marketability. “The bottle gave us a shape that was not only appealing, but it also provided enough billboard space to tell the story of the product,” he says.

A bold, eye-catching color palette decorates a full-body shrink-sleeve label, which is gravure-printed by an unnamed supplier. Shrink sleeves, as well as gravure technology, were selected for their ability to create a premium appearance, Sperber relates. The label’s graphics show a black silhouette of a figure running up a mountain, “an experience that everyone can aspire to,” Sperber says, against a background of vivid red, yellow, and blue streaks.

Apparently, the selections of product ingredients, packaging components, and price point hit their mark: Sperber reports that 5-Hour Energy will achieve sales of $200 million in 2008.

Researched List: Engineering Services Firms
Looking for engineering services? Our curated list features 100+ companies specializing in civil, process, structural, and electrical engineering. Many also offer construction, design, and architecture services. Download to access company names, markets served, key services, contact information, and more!
Download Now
Researched List: Engineering Services Firms
Conveying Innovations Report
Editors report on distinguishing characteristics that define each new product and collected video demonstrating the equipment or materials as displayed at the show. This topical report, winnowed from nearly 300 PACK EXPO collective booth visits, represents a categorized, organized account of individual items that were selected based on whether they were deemed to be both new, and truly innovative, based on decades of combined editorial experience in experiencing and evaluating PACK EXPO products.
Take me there
Conveying Innovations Report