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Coleman's Sheltra packs for convenience

New clamshell packs for smoke and gas detectors went through many versions, but samples were available in time for the buying season. Now the consumer-oriented packs are filling the retail pipeline.

3Commonality2 is one of the features of Coleman1s packages for both smoke alarms and carbon monoxide detectors. Package size an
3Commonality2 is one of the features of Coleman1s packages for both smoke alarms and carbon monoxide detectors. Package size an

That Coleman Safety & Security Products introduced new packaging for a new line of home smoke and gas detectors at a National Hardware Show isn't unusual. But the path the packaging took from concept to finished samples was kind of rocky. Now that the new packs are in full production, the bumps in the road are all but forgotten.

The project began when Wichita, KS-based Coleman, a well-known maker of recreation and camping gear, acquired a company that made smoke and CO2 detectors. The renamed Coleman Safety & Security Products, Downers Grove, IL, began to look at ways to improve the folding cartons that the previous company used. Samples had to be available in a short period of time to meet the hardware and home center buying cycle.

When the redesign was completed, Coleman introduced its Sheltra line of detectors in two-piece thermoformed clamshells, custom-designed and produced by Innovative Plastech (Batavia, IL). The product identification and merchandising information is carried by a card with graphics designed by Source, Inc. (Chicago, IL).

After Coleman performed some research, it discovered that consumers wanted packaging that would simplify the selection of these home safety products, says Laura Mueller, a marketing communications specialist at Coleman. When it evaluated the packaging of competitors, it seized two opportunities. One was that few detectors were sold in transparent packages allowing consumers to see the product. The second was the graphic approach.

Competing packs depended heavily on red and black colors, denoting fire and smoke. "We wanted to do the opposite, use graphics that were comforting while informative and easy to understand," she says. Coleman turned to Source, a design firm with which it had experience. It created what Mueller calls "a feeling of comfort" through colors like Sheltra blue and a series of icons that are used to help consumers select the product most appropriate for them.

Still, Mueller says, some retailers prefer the paperboard boxes, so the clamshell packs are augmented by boxes with good visibility of the product. "Our packaging is not model dependent, it's customer dependent. That, too, is new to this category."

Quick development

Because it needed samples quickly, Coleman turned to Innovative Plastech, another supplier it had worked with in the past. What complicated the package design process was that the products were being redesigned at the same time as the package!

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