|
|
Spotlight:
Food & Beverage by Patrick Henry Getting A Handle, Seeing Red: Folgers Asserts Brand Equity With Provocative Packaging Folgers could have made news simply by switching its retail coffee containers from steel to plastic, but the top-selling Procter & Gamble (P&G) brand has grander ambitions for its packaging than that. Folgers new AromaSeal Canister also introduces a flavor-protecting air valve, a special tight lid, and an easy-to-grip handle, all combined in a package thats said to trumpet the products brand identity in a new and powerful way. According to P&G, the AromaSeal Canisters design features work in harmony both to promote the product and to enhance what the Folgers brand is all aboutthe consumer coffee experience.
Graphically speaking, the AromaSeal Canister isnt a radical departure from the metal packaging it will replace. Hyatt says that overall, the new package has the same footprint, architecture, and design theme as the traditional metal can. Nevertheless, the AromaSeal Canister contains an underlying design element thats intended to magnify the products brand image even beyond what can be achieved by text and visual images. John Recker, vice president-brand strategy at LPK (Libby Perszyk Kathman), a brand identity firm for Folgers in Cincinnati, Ohio, explains that in showcasing a product like Folgers coffee, color can be everythingand color is what the AromaSeal Canister conveys in abundance. Pump Up the Volume He notes that from a brand marketing point of view, the biggest advantage of a using a plastic canister is that the packaging material itself can be red, unlike a metal can covered with a red-colored shrink label. Red, he says, is one of Folgers brand equitiesa signal characteristic thats readily recognized by consumers. By being inherent in the material of the AromaSeal Canister, says Recker, the red color screams Folgers. This is no mere blast of sound and fury, adds Recker, but a calculated attempt to out-shout an attention-getting adversary on supermarket shelves. According to Recker, given that Folgers biggest competitor is Maxwell House, and their equity color is blue, the integral red of the AromaSeal package is a strong reassertion of Folgers dominant position among leading coffee brands (see sidebar). He says it even makes up for the fact that the AromaSeal Canisters unique shape affords a bit less space for text and graphics than the shrink labeling of the metal cans, which can be printed around their entire circumference. Instead of shrinkable label stock, the AromaSeal Canister uses heat transfer labelinga composition of inks, protective lacquers, and adhesives. The labels are gravure-printed in seven colors of ink including two applications of white for good opacity. The printed labels are then fused onto the surface of the canisters with a special thermal applicator to complete the process.
Elements of Style Recker says that LPK was involved in the development of the new package from the outset of the processan effort that spanned two years, according to P&Gs Hyatt. LPK partnered with P&G to develop the AromaSeal name, visual identity, and package graphics. The firm says that its creative strategy was to leverage all of the Folgers brand equitiesthe white signature logotype, the sun-and-mountain graphic, and the color redto maximize shelf impact and to ensure clear communication of the convenience, freshness, and safety aspects of the AromaSeal canister. According to LPK, the AromaSeal typographic treatment conveys the aromatic aspect of the coffee through the swirl that underscores the name. LPK also designed the canisters label, its foil seal, and the graphics for its embossed lid. In addition, the firm developed in-store marketing communications for the nationwide rollout. P&G hopes that consumers drawn to the canisters arresting appearance will be equally impressed by the quality of the product that they find inside. Hyatt explains that a one-way valve in the foil seal protects aroma and flavor by permitting gases to escape from the freshly packed product while the canisters are in transit. De-gassing in transit, says Hyatt, means that when coffee in AromaSeal Canisters arrives at the store, it will be fresher and more flavorful than coffee delivered in metal containershence the enhancement of the consumer coffee experience. Changeover Will Be Gradual She says that Folgers drinkers desire to multiply the experience has made the 39 oz. package the brands most requested size. The popular Classic Roast blend was chosen as the first Folgers product to make the transition from steel to plastic, but theres no firm schedule for migrating the rest of the line. It is just going to happen over time, Hyatt says. | ||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
© 2004-2008 ST Media Group International. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part is prohibited without consent from publisher.
DECEMBER 4, 2008
1:00 PM EASTERN
This special 90-minute webinar will feature up-to-date insights into the market forces affecting package design and sustainability. Registration is FREE for the first 100 participants. An $89.99 fee applies for all subsequent registrants. Attendees will receive a copy of Packaging Sustainability: Tools, Systems and Strategies for Innovative Package Design (a $49.95 value) by Wendy Jedlicka.
Keynote Address by:
MINAL MISTRY
Project Manager, Sustainable
Packaging Coalition/GreenBlue

COMPASS is an online software tool for packaging designers and engineers to compare the environmental impacts of their package designs.
