Packaging

Story

By Jessica Jacobsen

Smart future for beverage labels

Intelligent labels further branding, security

When it comes to smartphone usage, American consumers are seeing their time on the devices climb. According to “The Nielsen Total Audience Report,” April 2020, nearly half (46 percent) of all time spent on media among adults 18-34 is on smartphones.


Given the amount of time that consumers are spending on their smartphones, brand owners are finding more ways to tap into this engagement beyond social media channels.


“Consumers have endless access to the Internet via smartphones” says Gwen Chapdelaine, marketing director at Fort Dearborn Co., Elk Grove, Ill. “Smart packaging allows brands to connect with consumers wherever they are and gives them access to more information at their fingertips, even right in the grocery store. They also allow brand owners to collect data regarding their consumers and supply chain.


“For beverages, labels and packages have limited space for content,” she continues. “With a simple scan, smart labels can expand packaging content to give consumers recipes, additional product information (nutrition facts, recycling instructions, etc.), promotional/seasonal content, contests and interactivity. For labels and packaging using VR (virtual reality) and AR (augmented reality), it’s an opportunity for brand enhancement by bringing the products to life to tell a story or animate characters. We’ve seen some of these applications used in the wine and liquor markets.”

Bottle cap, Liquid, Fluid, Ingredient, Drink

Frederick Wildman and Sons released augmented reality (AR) experiences for its Santi and Nino Negri wine brands. Unlocked via a QR code on the neck of the bottle, users are taken to a suite of educational tools such as a guided wine tasting, food pairings, the history of the bottle and winery, and more. (Image courtesy of Frederick Wildman and Sons)

Pedro Garza, marketing development manager of food for Avery Dennison Smartrac, adds that the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic adjusted how consumers shop, which in turn elevated the adoption of smart labeling technology.


“This forced change in consumer behavior spurred retail models to quickly evolve and accelerate their digital transformation initiatives so that they can capture the burgeoning share of mouth movement online as well as offer their customers new ways to shop,” he explains. “These digital and touchless initiatives have led to the rise of intelligent labels to help enable a variety of use cases such as automating and digitizing inventory, enabling traceability and transparency within the supply chain, as well as lead to more touchless experiences for the consumer.


“COVID-19 has accelerated the adoption of contactless technologies including Near-Field Communication (NFC),” Garza continues. “We have seen an increased adoption in the technology as a means of pre-sales consumer interaction, tap-to-pay technologies and many post-sale engagements. The post-sale engagements include many use cases such as instruction on use of the products, future incentives/coupons and customer loyalty programs, brand protection with authentication and the most popular with re-ordering.”

“These digital and touchless initiatives have led to the rise of intelligent labels to help enable a variety of use cases such as automating and digitizing inventory, enabling traceability and transparency within the supply chain, as well as lead to more touchless experiences for the consumer.”

— Pedro Garza, marketing development manager of food for Avery Dennison Smartrac

atma.io is a digital platform that connects digital triggers to track, manage and store all of the events associated with an individual product across its lifecycle, says Avery Dennison Smartrac’s Pedro Garza. (Image courtesy of Avery Dennison Smartrac)

Portable communications device, Mobile phone, Plant, Azure, Gadget, Gesture, Finger, Telephone

Secure solutions
Although smart labels can offer an abundance of benefits to brands owners, experts note that the security aspects are one of the most enticing attributes.

Fort Dearborn’s Chapdelaine highlights the role that smart labels are playing in safety and security measures for the beverage market.

“Smart labeling can be used in product tracking and security,” she says. “We have recently developed an in-line application process to adhere EAS (electronic article surveillance) tags to the inside of a shrink sleeve label for theft reduction. The tag triggers the store alarm if the product is not purchased. Digital codes, watermarks and tags can also be used for anti-counterfeiting to verify product authenticity for consumers.”

In addition to brand owners realizing the benefits of smart labels, consumers also recognize the safety and security they can provide.


“Research shows that consumers are willing to pay more for products that can show them where ingredients come from,” Avery Dennison Smartrac’s Garza says. “This demand for transparency and traceability is a trend that brands and retailers are designing around to bolster their supply chains while also providing more information to their customers. Intelligent labels such as RFID, when combined with digital traceability platforms, can be a powerful tool to tell the end-to-end story of a product as well as making it easier to trace in the event of a recall.


“Brand protection is a key driver with NFC technologies ― specifically when the product is a consumable,” he continues. “The attention to authenticating the product directly correlates to a much needed safeguard on overall well-being of the consumers. Embedding an NFC tag behind the label provides an opportunity for a seamless interaction with no line-of-sight required to provide assurance to the consumers. At a fraction of a cost, providing this level of assurance creates higher levels of brand protection and increases the lifetime value of the consumers to the brands.”


Adopting for the masses

As smart labels gain more traction in consumer packaged goods (CPG), experts note that the technology’s adoption within the beverage market is pointing to a promising future.


“The beverage market is quickly gaining traction as brands are becoming more agile in their ability to provide digitized solutions; COVID-19 certainly exposed the need for such agility within the supply chain,” Garza says. “The CPG segment has traditionally been a key driver for the adoption of digital ID solutions like NFC technologies. It is great to see that brands are now moving toward an offering at a unit level versus the traditional packaging levels to ensure that each digitized product has a unique connection to the consumers.”


Kim Flynn, marketing manager at Hammer Packaging, a Fort Dearborn company, suggests technology usage remains early in the beverage market for adoption, but she is seeing a diverse set of uses for the technology.




“Smart labeling in the beverage industry is still emerging,” Flynn explains. “We’ve seen more creativity with AR and VR in the wine and spirits market. We have customers who utilize the embedded label codes for functional uses such as store check-out scanning, improved throughput and supply chain tracking. We expect to see wider adoption of various technologies such as NFC, conductive inks, etc., as the costs to implement decrease.”


When utilizing smart labels, Flynn highlights the importance of keeping the consumer in mind.


“For consumers, the easier the technology is to use, the more engagement a brand can expect from consumers,” she says. “There are smart labeling technologies that include a code on the label or are embedded into the overall label so consumers can scan anywhere on the package to access additional content and promotions.”



Drinking straw, Communication Device, Hand, Food, Tableware, Table, Juice, Cocktail, Gesture, Telephony

Smart labels can provide promotional contents, link to contest and encourage consumer interactivity, experts note. (Image courtesy of Getty Images)

Avery Dennison Smartrac’s Garza notes that RFID and NFC technologies have been growing in adoption, but the need states will dictate which solution companies are looking to employ.


“Because RFID is a ‘one-to-many’ technology, it allows retailers and brands to quickly capture hundreds of items in a matter of seconds allowing for increased inventory visibility, which can then be digitized online to optimize omnichannel shopping,” Garza says. “NFC is favored for brands wanting to enable consumer interaction on a one-to-one basis with their products, using their smartphone as an example.”


To meet the growing needs associated with smart labels, Avery Dennison announced atma.io from the company’s connected product cloud.


“atma.io is a new digital platform that connects digital triggers to track, manage and store all of the events associated with an individual product across its lifecycle,” he explains. “By offering the widest range of digital triggers with this new connected product cloud, we can help brands and retailers create a digital bridge for all physical products. Such a solution set can help brands and retailers achieve 99 percent inventory accuracy, drive labor reduction, minimize out of stocks, and improve the online ordering experience.”


To serve today’s smart label adopters, Fort Dearborn’s Chapdelaine notes the company offers an array of solutions, including printing codes, triggers for augmented reality, digital watermarks, as well as NFC, EAS and RFID.


“For shrink sleeves, we provide EAS and RFID tag application making the tags neatly hidden and functional,” she adds. “We also have partnerships and resources for AR and VR development.”


With so many resources to provide beverage-makers, Chapdelaine prognosticates that smart labels will become a solution for a growing group of brand owners.


“As more marketing goes online, we’ll see an increase in promotional uses for smart label technology in beverages,” she says. “Brands are always trying to drive consumer engagement on social media, utilizing technology already at their fingertips. We also expect to see an increase in functional labeling for supply chain, security and tracking, as new options are emerging for integrated digital technology and printed packaging.”


Avery Dennison Smartrac’s Garza also remains bullish about the future of smart labels and the beverage market.


“In the very near future, we will live in a world where every single item in the beverage market will have a unique digital identity and a digital life, which will be enabled by the adoption of intelligent labels,” he says. “This will unlock use cases that we may have not even conceptualized yet. Brands will be better able to tell their end-to-end story, retailers will be able to conjure richer consumer experiences at retail, and we’ll design ways to enable a more circular economy that maps to a zero-waste future. We think that’s a future everyone can buy into.


“The future of smart labeling technologies is an exciting one, which now opens the door for limitless applications,” Garza continues. “This creates an opportunity for brands and consumers to better understand each other with one common bond that has brought them together: digital transformation. The beverage market is headed toward an exciting era of more data points, smarter consumers that have sustainability at the top of mind and providing them with products that are best-fit to support these initiatives provides a circular economy, which in-turn will accelerate more adoption of technologies such as NFC.” BI


Packaging News ...
Product, Textile, Font
CORE Hydration’s PCR plastic bottles
CORE Hydration bottles made from 100 percent post-consumer recycled plastic, excluding the cap and label, now are on shelves nationwide. Announced in October, the packaging update is critical to consumers with more than half of CORE fans sharing that a bottle made from recycled materials is important to them, according to a 2019 CORE A&U Study. “We know that sustainability is top of mind for CORE consumers, which is why we’re thrilled to announce that all CORE Hydration bottles are made from 100 percent post-consumer recycled plastic,” said Kelli Freeman, vice president of water for Keurig Dr Pepper, in a statement. “CORE is committed to a more sustainable future, starting with this transition to recycled materials. It is the same bottle shape and design consumers have grown to know and love, but in a more sustainable, environmentally-friendly package.” The new CORE Hydration post-consumer recycled plastic bottle features the How2Recycle label, an industry-leading standardized labeling system that communicates recycling instructions to consumers. The recycled plastic bottles are available nationwide in most major retailers and convenient stores. www.hydratewithcore.com
Aluminum can, Baseball glove, Tin, Liquid
Cutwater Spirits’ co-branded MLB packaging
Cutwater Spirits welcomed the return of baseball on April 1 by releasing new co-branded canned cocktails while also increasing its in-stadium presence through partnerships with teams across the league. Cutwater began rolling out co-branded, limited-edition cans of its popular Vodka Mule. The cans will feature the trademarks and official logos of six major league teams: the San Diego Padres, Arizona Diamondbacks, St. Louis Cardinals, Washington Nationals, Atlanta Braves and New York Yankees. Also, Cutwater has increased their ballpark presence with all of its partners: the aforementioned six teams plus the Cincinnati Reds and New York Mets. This year, Cutwater will re-release four-packs of its Padres Vodka Mule as well as introduce the Padres Tequila Paloma, a 7 percent alcohol-by-volume (ABV) cocktail made with real tequila and grapefruit soda. Both cans will be available as part of a mixed 12-pack and sold exclusively in the greater San Diego area. www.cutwaterspirits.com
Packaging and labeling, Bottle cap, Liquid, Condiment, Fluid, Ingredient
Uncle Matt’s Organic family-friendly two-pack
Uncle Matt’s Organic announced that its Ultimate Immune Orange Juice Beverage now is available in a family-friendly two-pack at Costco locations throughout Texas for a suggested retail price of $10.99. Ultimate Immune Orange Juice Beverage is made with organic orange juice, elderberry, 300 percent of the daily dose of vitamin C, 50 percent of the daily dose of vitamin D, and 25 percent of the daily dose of zinc for immune and wellness support. www.unclematts.com
Font
REBEL Hard Coffee Variety Pack
Twelve5 Beverage Co. released its new REBEL Hard Coffee variety eight-pack featuring hard latte favorites such as the Mocha Hard Latte and Vanilla Hard Latte flavors, as well as two new hard coffee drinks: the Maple Pecan Hard Latte and Salted Caramel Hard Latte. “We are proud to be the first hard coffee brand to bring a variety pack to the market,” said Michael Sargent, senior brand manager of REBEL Hard Coffee, in a statement. “Our team is dedicated to providing coffee and alcohol lovers great tasting, innovative hard coffee beverages to enjoy ― from mocha to salted caramel.” Exclusive to the REBEL Hard Coffee variety pack, the Maple Pecan Hard Latte and Salted Caramel Hard Latte will debut alongside the Mocha Hard Latte and Vanilla Hard Latte core flavors. The variety pack is available in more than 40 states in select grocery, convenience and liquor stores. www.rebelhardcoffee.com
Plastic bottle, Liquid, Drinkware, Product, Tableware, Plant, Fluid, Drink
SodaStream ‘Art for Action’ bottles
Plastic waste can have a lasting impact on the environment. In fact, it’s predicted that we will have more plastic than sea life in the ocean by 2050, according to data from the World Economic Forum. SodaStream is on a mission to reduce single-use plastic waste. To kick off Earth Month in April, SodaStream partnered with PangeaSeed Foundation, an ocean conservation nonprofit, to create three limited-edition SodaStream “Art for Action” bottles designed to help consumers actively reduce their single-use plastic waste. The bottles were designed by three sustainably minded artists: Hannah Eddy from Reno, Megan Pelto from Portland and Ricardo Gonzalez from Brooklyn. The artists were inspired by their mutual love of the planet stemming from different aspects of their lives. “The illustration I created for the campaign was inspired by our connection with nature and how everything works together,” Eddy said in a statement. “When we realize our connection to each other and the planet, we can begin to realize the important role we each have to help be part of a solution toward positive change.” For each limited-edition bottle sold, a donation will be made to PangeaSeed Foundation’s environmental education and awareness efforts. www.sodastream.com
Food, Font, Ingredient
Dos Equis Lime & Salt Variety 12-Pack
Hitting the shelves this year, Dos Equis introduced its Lime & Salt Variety 12-Pack. The fresh lineup of Pineapple, Watermelon, Cucumber and Lime & Salt contain 135 calories in each 12-ounce can and has an alcohol by volume (ABV) of 4.2 percent. The new pack launched in Southern California, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Louisiana, Illinois, Oklahoma and Colorado. The brand also plans to expand to additional core markets later this year, it says. “We’re introducing Dos Equis Lime & Salt Variety Pack with the aim to have significant impact in the Mexican Imports category,” said Edith Llerena, senior brand manager for Dos Equis, in a statement. “Our retail partners should be confident that this variety pack will drive incremental sales and profits as this delivers the same, great Dos Equis taste with a hint of natural fruit flavors and a touch of lime and salt.” www.dosequis.com

May 2021 | bevindustry.com

Logo, Text, Font