Late-Stage Customisation: the Benefits of Digital Printing in the Factory
Recent years have seen a marked change in how brands approach their product packaging design and manufacturing. Consumer trends and demands and market challenges like continued supply chain disruption have led to a drive for greater control and increased autonomy and flexibility.
Customising more packaging within the factory walls is a key element of this market evolution, with manufacturers turning to digital printing technology to make this a reality – a process known as ‘late-stage customisation’.
Late-stage customisation of product packaging on- or near-line using digital printing can provide new opportunities for brands, including creating limited-edition packaging for special events, facilitating consumer engagement via on-pack marketing campaigns, and implementing personalisation to elevate the unboxing experience. Greater customisation of packaging in-house can also allow manufacturers to maximise upstream productivity and mitigate supply chain delays, as Jim Orford, Product Manager, Domino Printing Sciences, explores.
The rise of late-stage customisation
Late-stage customisation is any packaging printing or customisation performed by the manufacturer, instead of by a third-party packaging provider or converter. Traditionally, printing costs would have limited this to information such as batch and product codes and best-before dates. However, in-line printing technology advancements can now enable brands to buy generic packaging and add additional customisation within the factory walls while ensuring efficiency and cost-effectiveness without compromising consumer appeal.
Late-stage customisation allows brand owners and converters to add or modify variable information shortly before it is applied to the product, for example, translating a product’s ingredient summary into multiple languages. Rather than having to purchase and store a large quantity of stock for each language variant, late-stage customisation allows the use of one generic label, where the variable data, in the form of multiple languages and SKUs, can be added in the last stages of the production process.
The benefits of late-stage customisation
Late-stage customisation offers many benefits for brands, from increasing factory efficiency and reducing the amount of stock and waste material in supply chains to helping expedite products to market in response to evolving consumer demands. These benefits include:
- Reduced costs: Late-stage customisation reduces brands’ reliance on external packaging providers by providing the opportunity to trial new packaging designs and variations without having to adhere to minimum order runs or additional costs for short-run prints.
- Increased flexibility and responsiveness: Late-stage customisation gives brands more flexibility to respond quickly to changes in the marketplace in response to, for example, consumer feedback or material shortage. Making the necessary adjustments in the factory also has the added benefit of increased production uptime – with reduced lead times and limited downtime due to product changeovers.
- Reduced Inventory: Late-stage customisation minimises the need to store multiple packaging inventories because brands can buy generic packaging and add customisation in-line. This can translate to significant cost savings, as packaging typically has the longest lead time of all material stock, which can lead to it being the largest inventory item with low stock turnover compared to product ingredients.
- Reduced waste: Buying large quantities of media for short runs to achieve minimum order quantities can be exceptionally wasteful as only some stock will often be used. This is not a problem with late-stage customisation using digital printing, as brands can produce their own short-run packaging in-house, providing the capability to flex production without over-ordering.
- Enhanced consumer experience: Brand owners understand the difficulty in standing out from the fierce competition on the supermarket shelf and are always looking for ways to interact with consumers. With late-stage customisation, brands can adjust packaging designs for greater consumer interaction. For example, in recent years, there has been significant interest in including variable 2D codes on product packaging, allowing brands to link to additional information, collect feedback, and further engage with consumers in-store and at home.
Considerations for late-stage customisation
Late-stage customisation enables brand owners to have better control over their packaging content and to speed up the process of experimenting with new packaging designs. There are several potential scenarios where late-stage customisation could benefit brands, including:
- New or experimental product launches: Creating multiple SKUs that correspond to various languages and multiple formats is a long process – up to 12 months – when launching a new product range. The time it takes for the product to reach the market can be reduced significantly by using digital printing and late-stage customisation.
- Seasonal products: Keeping up with market trends is the key to making products attractive on the supermarket shelf and standing out from competitors’ products. With late-stage customisation, brands can create engaging variations of product packaging – for example, seasonal product editions, or with a picture of a champion team for a sporting event – without relying on external packaging providers.
- Security features: In the late-stage customisation process, it is possible to print variable data on labels or packaging that will allow track and trace of the product using unique codes. For example, high-end consumer goods can be protected against counterfeiting by applying variable data to 2D codes, such as QR codes, to allow consumers and supply chain partners to verify authenticity.
- Regional language versions: Brand owners understand that engaging with their audience in their native language can establish a stronger emotional and cultural connection with their end user. Late-stage customisation allows for different language versions for each region rather than printing multiple languages on one label. This frees up more on-pack space for branding and creative design. It also allows packaging to be modified to create special editions in regional languages.
- Personalised packaging: The rise in ecommerce has increased the need to engage with the end-user in more personal and unique ways to stand out from the competition. Digital printing and late-stage customisation can provide new opportunities to include more personalised unboxing experiences.
Conclusion
One of the main advantages of digital printing and late-stage customisation is that it is possible to create multiple packaging varieties, colours, and SKUs in record time and with minimal waste. Late-stage customisation offers flexibility, which means brand owners can respond quickly to market demands without compromising their footprint. Last but not least, it provides better security, brand protection, and a more personalised packaging experience for consumers.