The eight drivers of today’s packaging trends

There are eight global drivers guiding the trends in today’s packaging that brand owners need to know in order to develop actionable insights for packaging.

REAL-TIME INTERACTION. In today’s 24/7, connected environment, retailers and brand owners are using new technologies, such as QR codes, to interact with consumers in real time. Shown here is a QR code used on bags of coffee from Ethical Bean Coffee Co.
REAL-TIME INTERACTION. In today’s 24/7, connected environment, retailers and brand owners are using new technologies, such as QR codes, to interact with consumers in real time. Shown here is a QR code used on bags of coffee from Ethical Bean Coffee Co.

When looking at opportunities for new products and packaging, brand owners tend to speak of “trends.” But what’s behind those trends? What causes them to become part of the consumer’s lifestyle? What motivates those trends?

According to Jocelyne Ehret, Director of Packaging Consulting Services for PTIS in Europe, part of HAVI Global Solutions, propelling those trends are “packaging drivers.” She explains, “Trends generally stay the same, they are a tendency exhibited by a group of people. Whereas drivers are often outside packaging’s control but provide strong packaging influence: the need behind the need.”

For example, while easy-open packages are a packaging trend, the driver behind that trend is people’s desire for convenience and freedom, she says.

To develop actionable insights for packaging, Ehret advises that packagers need to look at both trends and drivers. Analyzing the global environment for packaging, she has identified eight drivers—Emerging Markets, Retailer Impacts, Holistic Design Thinking, Sustainability, Consumers/Social Media/Personal Technology, Science & Technology, Laws & Regulations, and Anticipatory Issues—as well as four Consumer Drivers. 

Emerging markets
According to Ernst & Young, “The global economy is at a turning point. Fast-growth economies in Asia, the Middle East, Africa, Latin America, and Eastern Europe now form almost half of global GDP and, in 2010, they contributed 70% to overall global growth.

“These trends are accelerating. By 2050, fast-growth economies are projected to account for 65% of the global economy. In contrast, most developed markets are still struggling to recover after the global recession.”

Notes Ehret, these fast-growth economies include not only the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India, and China), which are expected to grow to more than 1 billion middle-class consumers in five years, but also the “Next Eleven” (N-11) nations—Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, Iran, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, the Philippines, Turkey, South Korea, and Vietnam—estimated to grow to 2 billion middle-class consumers in the same time frame.

“When we look at the middle class, we know they are urban, mobile, and global,” Ehret says. “If you are in the CPG market, you are going to have to adapt your package design, structure, and message to reach this new market.

“Today, packaging production is more product-oriented, but I believe in the future, it will be more consumer-oriented,” requiring customization and optimization, she adds.

Retailer impacts
With the added pressure of a 24/7-connected world, retailers are evolving the way in which they interact to fit more seamlessly into consumers’ busy lives, explains Ehret. “Everything is available,” she says, “everything is connected.”

In this environment, retailers and brand owners now have the opportunity for more interaction with the consumer, more of a two-way conversation—whether it’s through digital means, such as websites, or by gathering consumer information through loyalty cards.

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