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Untitled Document
Packaging Professionally
By Tom Boyles | PMQ Staff

I’ve always said that you can sell anything if you
package it right…even rocks. I can even prove it.
Some of you older blokes may remember this.
There was a rather ingenious guy back in the 1970s
who made millions selling ordinary rocks. The trick
was his packaging. He simply glued two eyes on a
rock and put them in some creative packaging and
sold them as a novelty toy…Pet Rocks.
But now we’re not selling rocks…well, I have had a
few pizzas that did taste worse than dirt, but for the
sake of moving on, we are in the business of selling
food. Can you packaging help you sell more? Sure.
Can choosing the right packaging save you money?
Absolutely. Can the wrong packaging decision cause
you to lose business? No doubt. Pizza shop owners
should view their pizza box and other packaging as
a marketing weapon to begin with, but most simply
think of it as a container for takeaway. Let’s learn a
bit more about packaging.
George Braoudakis, director at XMG/Coup-on-a-
Box (tel: 61 3 9846 6555, mob: 0402 085 860, www.
couponabox.com.au) says the biggest mistake he
sees in packaging is buying based on price alone. “I
suggest that you look at five things when it comes
to packaging,” George says. “Number 1: If it’s an
Australian product, 2: Quality, 3: Size, 4: Reliablity and
consistent service, and 5: Has the box/package got
any added value for your customers (eg. coupons).”
“Most pizza companies ignore packaging as a tool
and, instead, view it as merely a carrying vessel,” said
John Correll, packaging expert and owner of Correll
Concepts. “That being the case, the driving factor
behind packaging development is cost reduction.
In the pizza industry, the locus of packaging
development resides in purchasing rather than in
marketing. I believe that by viewing packaging as a
marketing weapon rather than as a carrying vessel a
company will greatly enhance its bottom line.”
Marketing
John says that, except for the actual pizza, your
pizza packaging is the vehicle of greatest exposure
and consumer interaction in your business! The
reasons he lists are: (a) the packaging has the highest
frequency of customer contact of any element in
your business and (b) it has the longest duration of
customer contact of any element in the business. He
says that:
• Customer Contact Frequency: For each delivery/
carry-out pizza sold, an average of 2.5 persons
have contact with the box. So a pizza store that
sells 50,000 pizzas annually has 125,000 customer
contacts per year with the box (50,000 X 2.5).
• Customer Contact Duration: With each purchase,
a typical consumer spends at least 10 minutes
viewing and interacting with your packaging!
(About 20 percent of them even save the box
for another 12 hours in the refrigerator.) In that
period the customer views it, reads it, feels it,
transports it and operationally interacts with
it. Yes, believe or not, the typical consumer
spends more time viewing and interacting with
your pizza box than with all of your advertising,
signage, building, and service staff put together.
“So what’s the result of these two factors
combined?” John asks. “For a pizza store that sells
50,000 pizzas annually, its box garners a whopping 1,250,000 minutes, or 20,833 hours, of customer
contact time per year. Nothing else even comes
close.”
George points out another facet to packaging
in that with all of these exposures, you have the
perfect opportunity to display your coupons and/or
advertising on the box. You can contact a company
like Coup-on-a-Box (www.couponabox.com.au) or
use your menus. Simply take a bit of hot glue and
attach your menus and this will serve as a great
vehicle to distribute specials or takeaway menus, web
sites, phone numbers, function rooms, or any other
info you need to get out, such as VIP clubs.
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