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Obie's oval

This cookie mix marketer needed a paperboard container with a small footprint yet all the shelf impact of a round canister. An unusual oval was the answer.

Flat blanks fed from a magazine are pressed around a forming mandrel to produce the desired oval shape
Flat blanks fed from a magazine are pressed around a forming mandrel to produce the desired oval shape

When it first reached store shelves last November, Obie's instant cookie mix had a different name and it came in a different container. Because its current paperboard package is so unusual, prototype equipment had to be developed. Then further changes came in March of this year, when Delicious Frookie of Des Plaines, IL, bought the Seattle area firm that had launched the all natural, health-oriented line. With all that in the past, Obie's cookie mix is now poised for takeoff.

"We'll increase the scale of the business significantly," says Delicious Frookie president Phil Roos. "Our distribution system gets our products into 75% of the nation's supermarkets and 80% of the health food stores."

A Skyrocket launch The Obie's line was launched by Jeff Caden of Skyrocket Foods, Bainbridge Island, WA. Caden felt that snack and cookie products having no or low fat would appeal to today's increasingly health-conscious consumers. But unlike the others already available, Caden's is offered as a powdered mix, which permits it to capitalize on two other food trends. The first is "neotraditionalism," an interest in returning to foods prepared in the home, as long as they're convenient. Second is the demand for value. As the package copy states, "Enjoy home-baked goodness in a granola bar at half the price of many packaged bars."

Since Caden was bringing a new product to the cookie mix category, he wanted a different package, too, something other than the bag-in-carton approach taken by Betty Crocker et al. Yet he needed to keep the same height as the competition's packages or his product would get lost on the shelf.

He selected the round Ultrakan® from Huhtamaki (Overland Park, KS). At 7" tall and 4" in diameter, the brightly decorated container commanded plenty of attention on the retail shelf. It also permitted Caden to call his product "Obie's Cookie Jar," and package copy instructed consumers how to use the canister as a cookie jar after the cookies were baked.

The problem with this cookie jar approach was that the package had so much head space, it wasn't perceived as being 'green' enough. Not only were consumers worried about overpackaging, they also wondered if the package was filled to its proper level. So Caden started searching for a nonround container, one that would have less head space yet could maintain its height and full shelf presence.

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