
Vignola is a rural Italian region with arguably some of the best cherries. Picked daily by the Vignola Consortium - which is made up of over 200 farming families that manually harvest and fill approximately 400 boxes of cherries per day, per farmer. These cherries can be farm-to-table the same day they were picked, and their quality and freshness make a premium product.
But the consortium faced a challenge - the product was reaching the store shelves in less than 24 hours, but the customer did not always understand (or appreciate) the freshness and quality of the product. The producers wanted a solution that would allow information from many sources (the consortium farmers), in a quick time frame (less than 24 hours), to educate the consumer about the product (when and where they were picked).
Ghelfi Ondulati, a corrugated converter specializing in digital innovation, had the idea to digitally print corrugated packages that would work in conjunction with mobile technology to tell the consumer the “story” of the cherries they had purchased, or, as Bonfanti says, “Make a new box, that learns about the product it contains, and connects the user with information he needs.”
The company used an HP PageWide T1100S high-speed color inkjet web press for corrugated packaging to print a unique QR code on each box of Vignola cherries, which allows the customer to scan the code and be short linked to a unique web site where they can see traceability information for their specific box of cherries.