Unique extended-text label ticks all the boxes

A custom-designed label provides space for two languages on essential oil bottles from dōTERRA, while digital printing enables short runs, quick turnaround, and premium aesthetics.

The wraparound label suits the clean and streamlined appearance of dōTERRA’s essential oil packaging.
The wraparound label suits the clean and streamlined appearance of dōTERRA’s essential oil packaging.

dōTERRA of Pleasant Grove, UT, is the leading producer of essential oils, having a 23% share of the global market. With its name a Latin derivative meaning “gift of the earth,” the company embraces the mission of sharing therapeutic-grade essential oils with the world. According to Missy Larsen, Vice President Corporate Communications for dōTERRA, when the company was launched in 2008, its seven founders were among the first to recognize the health benefits of essential oils.

“They were really visionary in the way they looked at personalized healthcare and at alternative ways to increase physical and mental functions through essential oils,” she explains.

dōTERRA’s first products included 25 single oils and 10 blends. Today it offers more than 100 CPTC Certified Pure Therapeutic Grade® essential oils, from which it also creates blends, sourced from over 40 nations. In addition, it sells nutritional, spa, and healthy living products based on essential oil technologies and a comprehensive wellness philosophy. In total, its global number of SKUs tops 10,000.

In dōTERRA’s early days, label design was simple. Since its essential oil products are just that—essential oils and nothing else—their label required little copy. For example, a list of ingredients for its peppermint oil included “peppermint oil.” But as FDA regulations grew, dōTERRA was forced to add more text. Despite the tiny 5-mL and 15-mL size of its bottles, it was successful in including all the required information on its U.S. labels. But as it prepared to launch in Canada in 2014, it learned this information had to be added in French, as well.

Looking for a solution that would allow it to meet the new regulations while retaining the aesthetics of its premium product and keep costs low, dōTERRA turned to its long-time label supplier Kala Packaging.

A clean and cost-effective solution

Traditionally, Consumer Packaged Goods companies that require dual-language labels for their products might use one of several options. Among them, a separate carton with a leaflet inserted along with the bottle, or a peel-back, booklet-style label that meshes two materials together.

Says Kala Senior Account Executive Jerrie Wilson, “dōTERRA was thinking they might have to put a piece of collateral material in a folding carton with each bottle, which would have been a departure from their norm as well as expensive. And actually, when they investigated it, it wouldn’t have complied with regulations anyway, because the information had to be on the bottle itself.”

For its European labels, dōTERRA uses a fold-out booklet-style label to accommodate 12 languages. According to Todd Purser, Senior Manager, Creative Services and Brand Marketing for dōTERRA, “it just doesn’t look clean.” He explains, “There’s a little ridge on the label when the booklet is added. And, once the booklet is folded out, it’s hard to fold it back up and get it all back in and tucked under.” For the Canadian market, dōTERRA was looking for something that would preserve the clean and streamlined design of its existing labels.

At the time dōTERRA approached Kala for help on the Canadian label, the converter had already been “theoretically thinking a lot about a wraparound peel back-style label,” says Wilson, so they used the opportunity to explore the option for dōTERRA.

“We took one of their existing labels and created a prototype with a modified length,” explains Wilson. “Our theory was that the surface-tension difference between the glass bottle and the label would provide enough differential that the peeling portion would, number one, stick well enough, and number two, stop pulling when it was peeled back to the point where it was no longer adhered to the main label but only to the glass bottle.

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