Shipper strategies for a global marketplace

How do packagers handle shippers that must be suitable for markets around the world? 3M says standardize on labels, while Hewlett-Packard likes packaging postponement.

3M?s Global Packaging Initiative Task Force hopes that its newly implemented Global Shipping Container Labeling Standards will b
3M?s Global Packaging Initiative Task Force hopes that its newly implemented Global Shipping Container Labeling Standards will b

Most manufacturers shipping product to multiple markets around the world quickly learn that the corrugated shipper so tried and true on the domestic scene needs serious tweaking before going global. Variations in language, regulatory requirements that are inconsistent from nation to nation, and temperature and humidity fluctuations are just a few of the issues that must be addressed if a company wants its shippers to consistently put their best foot forward in every market they penetrate.

Two firms willing to share their global shipper strategies with Packaging World are 3M of St. Paul, MN, and Hewlett-Packard of Palo Alto, CA. Each recognized recently that current practice was not getting it done, and each devised a comprehensive strategy to improve.

3M does it all

Few multinational companies can lay claim to a broader range of consumer and industrial products than 3M. From tape to fabric treatments to medical devices, the firm has its fingers in plenty of pies.

The fastest-growing markets for this vast array of products are outside the U.S. But as the firm grows its business around the globe, the folks in marketing have discovered a critical need: Packaging to communicate a consistent 3M image as a supplier of quality brand products and services throughout the world.

To meet this need head on, 3M's Global Packaging Initiative Task Force recently developed what it calls Global Shipping Container Labeling Standards. It's at least one way, says task force member and package engineering manager Warren Chirhart, for 3M to present itself to all customers around the world with "one face/one voice."

"When we explained to the company's executive level the problems and costs associated with inconsistent global packaging, we were able to convince them that not every 3M division should be making the decisions for shipping container labeling," says Chirhart. "What we've created is a global standard based essentially on three things: regulatory requirements, what customers want, and what 3M wants."

High on the priority list, 3M wanted to protect the appearance of its logo on packaging. Brand names, too, are better served under the new scheme. Many are brands of market power, including the likes of Scotch(TM), Scotch-Brite(TM), and Post-it®.

"We spend an awful lot of money and effort creating and protecting a trade dress and brand strategy," says Chirhart. "And then, because a case of product packed in one region isn't labeled in the right language or doesn't have the required regulatory information, we wind up overlabeling and sometimes obscuring logos or brand names." By adopting a global labeling strategy for shipping containers, unfortunate overlabeling situations can be greatly reduced.

When Chirhart speaks of shipper "labeling," he refers to one of four methods: a preprinted corrugated shipper, a printed pressure-sensitive label applied to a shipper, a label printed and applied to a case on-line, or an image printed directly onto a shipper on-line.

"One huge challenge is trying to put multiple languages on shippers so that they can be used in multiple regions," says Chirhart. "If we can accomplish that, we can lower our inventories significantly."

Pushing pictograms

Minimizing text is one strategy that 3M finds useful. It could be called the "picture-is-worth-a-thousand-words" strategy.

"We're pushing hard for the freedom to use pictograms in place of text," says Chirhart. "It helps if our marketers simplify packaging and say less on the shipping containers and intermediates and keep that kind of information either on the primary package or on an insert of some kind."

Pictograms are crucial in 3M's newly adopted Global Shipping Container Labeling Standards. Chirhart and company have compiled images representing hundreds of different products, including sheets of sandpaper, Post-it brand notes, bottles, cans and spray containers. Also standardized are pictograms for shippers, and for intermediate containers that go inside a shipper.

Chirhart would also like to see the regular use of pictograms adopted by other companies. "We'd prefer not to have to create all these things ourselves," he observes. "We'd like to be able to go to an Internet site and search for the pictogram we need. If there's a fee for using it, fine. But so far we see nobody doing this."

Nancy Alcorn, labeling senior specialist, 3M corporate marketing, wouldn't mind taking pictograms a step further. "It would be nice to get some agreement from governments and international agencies on the use of common pictograms depicting content," says Alcorn, who leads 3M's efforts at expanding the use of pictograms. That kind of harmonization, she believes, would go a long way toward maximizing packaging efficiency for all packaged goods marketers.

No matter how clever a company gets with pictograms, however, some text will always be necessary. And according to Alcorn, it's increasingly important that the text be presented not only in English but in the local language as well.

"There was an '80s and early '90s attitude that a product identified in English meant quality," says Alcorn. "So we didn't worry much about having shipper copy in Polish or Czech or whatever. Now customers prefer both languages, English and the local one, especially in emerging countries.

"Enforcement, of course, may vary. China has a local language law, but you'll see plenty of packages there in English only. As far as 3M is concerned, we strive to comply with all requirements on a global basis. The presence of local languages should give us a competitive advantage. If consumers in China can read the package copy in their language, they'll respond positively."

The logistics of applying many languages cost-effectively, however, is no easy task.

"It's tough," says Alcorn. "Relabeling at the local level is one possibility, but that can wreak havoc with graphics or consistency of the company's image."

Multilingual labeling

To circumvent relabeling, 3M's new global standard calls for multiple languages on labels. That means anywhere from two to 12 languages on a single label. The number depends on product volumes and the distribution scheme.

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