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    Davpack News


    Digital printing is increasing in popularity in the packaging sphere, thanks to its flexibility and the possibility of creative labelling solutions. Ideal for innovative branding and personalisation, digital printing allows businesses to deal with shorter print runs, avoiding the need to create plates and commit to a single design for a long period of time.

    To use digital printing, a digital image is transferred from a computer — or even a phone — to media such as cardboard boxes or labels, using high-volume or large-format printers. Digital printing offers an option that is accurate and high quality, and it does not involve the plates that more traditional print options require.

    Digital printing in action

    Coca Cola’s “Share a Coke” marketing campaign relied on the flexibility of digital printing to create labels for its bottles that made use of the most popular names in more than 70 countries, totalling over 1,000 names on their bottles. With each bottle labelled with one of these names, traditional plate printing would have been unwieldy. Instead, Coke chose digital printing as an effective way to get a lot of different label designs on its bottles and on the market, quickly. When the campaign was launched in Australia in 2011, they sold over 250 million personalised bottles and cans in a single summer.

    The ability to use variable data within a print campaign enabled Coca Cola to achieve this feat. Using older print methods, large blocks of bottles with the same name on the label would need to be printed in one print run, which would eliminate the possibility of shops stocking a range of labels, as the same names would be delivered together. Instead, digital printing made it possible to print random names in any order, so that the distribution of the bottles included varied names at the point of sale.

    Marks & Spencer has also dipped its toe into the waters of digital printing. The store launched a Summer of Flavour Fruit Jellies product that required food-grade, flexible packaging, and utilised digital printing to enable the new product to be trialled in-store — saving staff hours and costs.

    What are the consumer benefits of digital printing?

    From the perspective of a consumer, digital printing can enhance the buying experience. When this process has been used to decorate the packaging of the products, digitally printed items can be carefully branded and promote the brand image clearly. Products can really stand out and the design can be updated at any time, without the need to create new plates and invest in a long-term print plan to make the most of the existing outlay.

    Small businesses and digital printing

    Print runs do not need to be on the scale of Coca Cola’s distribution to call for digital printing. In fact, digital printing is ideally situated to manage small print runs, thanks to its flexibility and personalisation options.

    Smaller businesses can take advantage of digital printing to manage their day-to-day packaging design, as well as to launch and promote innovative, short-term campaigns. When digital images and designs are printed on demand, there is far less waste, too, which has environmental as well as economic benefits. Response times can be quicker, and designs can be personalised and reactive to short-term events or places to increase customer engagement. This means that small business owners can take advantage of the benefits of digitally printed labels, allowing them to use more creativity in their product packaging and branding.

    The quirky design of the Pip & Nut nut butter brand has been enabled in no small part by digital printing. The range of different designs for different products are made possible by the digital print process, reducing the cost of needing multiple designs on relatively short print runs.

    While digital printing can be more expensive than analogue options, the possibilities associated with it include less waste, higher consumer engagement with a product, and more creative and flexible packaging options. For smaller print runs in particular, it is not necessarily more expensive, and it offers benefits that older print options are simply unable to achieve. And, as it becomes more established, the price associated with digital printing will invariably begin to come down.

    Branding opportunities

    When businesses invest in high-quality branding, they want to promote and utilise this on their products and packaging design. Digital printing is accessible to smaller businesses in particular, as a low-cost (especially for smaller print runs) and creative way to share their message. It can also enable versatility, as packaging can be redesigned with ease if it is not making an impact or if it does not fit new branding guidelines.

    Like with the print-on-demand revolution in the book industry, digital printing for packaging is transforming and modernising the packaging and printing trades. Inkjet printing, in particular, is an up-to-date way forward for the industry. If offers businesses the chance to produce packaging in the most suitable, affordable way — without the need to commit to a long-term, high-volume print run to make plate production worthwhile.


    Supply Chain Services

    For a small business that is growing, inventory control is vital when trying to keep on top of everything. When carried out properly, it can reduce costs and workload — so implementing a stock management system should be a consideration if you’re expanding.

    Managing inventories, harnessing technology, educating staff and aligning partners will reduce costs and workload.

    1. Establish the true cost of your inventory

    To determine the true cost of your inventory, besides the cost of the stock itself, you must consider the cost of holding, handling, and other factors — whether or not you use a third-party logistics provider. If you use a 3PL, these costs will form part of the fee you pay them.

    Holding costs include:

    - Building rent and business rates
    - Utilities
    - Janitorial personnel and supplies (e.g. cleaning fluids)
    - Security personnel and equipment (including security patrols and CCTV)

    When it comes to handling costs, you may have bought equipment (e.g. a forklift truck), which is operated by staff, who must be paid. When stock is dispatched, vans or lorries are used. These are leased or bought, and have to be maintained.

    Packaging can be central to keeping these kind of costs down, and often the simplest solution is just utilising the right kind of packaging. For example, are double wall or triple wall cardboard boxes necessary, or will single wall boxes suffice? Could you use smaller primary packaging for individual items? Pallet optimisation is vital, because the cost of shipping will be affected by how many pallets are dispatched, and how many vehicles are needed to transport them.

    Optimising your storage facilities will also increase efficiency and reduce costs. Place your fastest-moving products nearest to the shipping area for quicker dispatch, slower-moving merchandise further back, and excess and obsolete stock at the very back of your warehouse. Often it’s the simplest solutions that are most effective.

    Additionally, think about insurance costs, losses through shrinkage and how much time your staff devote to inventory issues — a percentage of their pay will relate to the stock.

    2. Harness technology

    Keeping track of orders via your website and a spreadsheet may suffice when starting out, but a growing business requires increased sophistication.

    You might consider using a warehouse management system (WMS) to manage the receiving, storing and moving of goods, in conjunction with Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) for the collection, storage, and management of data.

    Such systems involve hardware, software, IT support and upgrades — so considerable amounts of money may be spent. However, to enable demand forecasting, which is crucial for growth, additional optimising software is needed. This analyses past usage, accounting for increases in sales due to seasonal variations or promotions, and decreases in sales due to lack of stock. This gives a reliable indication of expected demand, allowing you to plan accordingly.

    Such software can be purchased for online use, but cloud-based order management systems also exist, for which businesses pay subscription fees. These systems enable seamless integration of all the elements of a business — warehouse, online shop, and logistics — so business owners can keep track of orders and inventory across multiple sales channels. For example, if you want to add another ecommerce store to your business, a cloud-based system can accommodate it.

    Using the right technology in inventory management can increase your revenue, keep your costs down, decrease your workload and facilitate better customer service.

    3. Make sure your staff understand your inventory

    As your business grows, you may need to take on more staff, and it’s vital that everyone understands your procedures and why inventory control is important — especially your warehouse manager, if you employ one.

    Define your procedures as early as possible, and make sure they are documented, so that they are in place to cope with growth. Train your employees, so they know exactly what is expected of them and check on a regular basis that they are complying with procedures and carrying out their tasks to your satisfaction.

    Where there is evidence of non-compliance, action should be taken quickly. For example, if a staff member makes a mistake when ordering packaging and your next delivery contains the wrong size of cardboard box, delays could occur, which will increase your costs. Offer additional training to staff who need it and if their performance doesn’t improve, consider redeploying them to a role that doesn’t have so much impact upon your inventory — make inventory control part of the culture of your business.

    4. Align your supply chain partners

    Your inventory management strategy involves more than just the goods on your premises. Where do these goods come from, and how are they dispatched to your customers?

    Your strategy must encompass your supply chain partners. Their practices have an impact on your inventory management, so it’s vital that their activities align with yours.

    Your own aims may be well-defined, but what about those of your suppliers? What is their company culture? Can you rely on them to provide you with the correct items in the right quantities? A consignment that is short of several units of one vital item could lead to delays in dispatching orders, and you could lose business. The working practices of your 3PL, if you use one for your warehousing or transportation, must also be considered. Are they performing to your satisfaction? If not, why not?

    Your stock management system should provide reliability analysis regarding your supply chain partners. When issues are identified, they can be resolved. You could suggest how a partner might improve their performance, or keep more of their inventory in your warehouse, so as to avoid any future shortages.

    • Mike Webber
    • News App
    • English
    • Created 18 Apr 2016
    • Modified 18 Apr 2016
    • Hits 1679