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Optimizing industrial packaging through product design

New security seals company keeps packaging front-of-mind when developing a more robust product design, resulting in a smaller box size and greater end-user value.

CSS President & CEO Elisha Tropper (right) and company VP of Sales & Marketing Brian Lyle analyze the different packaging configuration options yielded by alternative security-seal product designs.
CSS President & CEO Elisha Tropper (right) and company VP of Sales & Marketing Brian Lyle analyze the different packaging configuration options yielded by alternative security-seal product designs.

“An afterthought.” According to Elisha Tropper, president and CEO of Cambridge Security Seals, Pomona, NY, that’s how packaging for industrial products is typically viewed. “I have spoken with manufacturers of industrial products around the world,” he says, “and for most of them, packaging is not even a consideration. They are manufacturers; they are not packagers. They make an industrial product, and industrial products are dumped into boxes. But whether the box is an inch bigger or an inch smaller, what does it matter?”

When Tropper—former owner of a packaging converter and current president and CEO of packaging strategy consultancy T3 Associates, acquired CCS in late 2010, he challenged this mindset at his company. Taking packaging optimization into consideration from the point of product design, CSS developed a sturdier product that requires approximately half the packaging of its competitors’ seals, resulting in a greater value for the end user and a product with a more premium presentation.

Explains Tropper, “We felt that the competitive packaging that existed on the market was a legitimate and obvious target and offered us an opportunity to improve not only the performance of the product, but also the performance of the packaging at the same time. And by performance of the packaging, we not only mean improving the rigidity and sturdiness of the package, but also the financial impact on our customers as well.”

Integrating product and package design
CSS, formerly the security seals division of industrial supplier Cambridge Resources, is a manufacturer of tamper-evident, tamper-resistant, and high-security loss prevention seals for customers across a wide range of industries, including trucking, shipping, logistics, cash-handling concerns, food and beverage, and pharmaceuticals, among others. Its most popular product is the PTS Plastic Truck Seal, a fixed-length plastic truck seal designed to detect and deter theft and contamination. The division was spun off as its own entity in 2010 to pursue the development of domestic manufacturing.

“From the outset, I instructed our people that our goal was to provide our customers with a significantly higher-value proposition than anything they could find anywhere else in the world, including Asia,” says Tropper. “So the manufacturing parameters I set forth were very simple: We would only produce a product whose performance was best in class, supported by a best-in-class customer service organization, while being priced as competitively as any company in the market. So basically, if we couldn’t produce a better product, and sell it at the most competitive price, and support it with the right kind of organization, we weren’t going to get into that product.”

CSS’s forte became the plastic security seal with an enhanced design, produced and packaged in an entirely automated process—in contrast, much of Asian manufacturing still relies on many manual operations. Says Tropper, “Manufacturing in China still forces you to compromise in some way, shape, or form on quality, on lead times, or on product development.”

Producing a better product, in Tropper’s view, included consideration of the packaging during the product design phase. “I still remember explaining to our team that there are essentially two components to packaging,” he says “There is the construction and the visuals of the package itself, and then there is the packing of the item within the package to fit, the ability to store it after opening, if necessary, and the protection it provides to the product in transit—all these things are part of what we call packaging. When we assembled the competing products, it was obvious that none of them was packaged particularly well.”

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