Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Sustainable packaging: Are Americans willing to pay more for “green”?


Mintel research shows consumers continue to buy natural, despite difficult economy.
By -- Packaging Digest, March 25, 2010

According to Mintel’s latest report on green living, the environment remains a concern for the majority of Americans. More than one-third (35%) of survey respondents say they would pay more for ‘environmentally friendly’ products.


“Given this increased interest in the environment over the past few years, nearly every segment of consumer products now offers a “green” option for shoppers,” comments Chris Haack, Mintel senior analyst. “Food and beverage and personal care are the two most mature categories and account for the majority of green products in the marketplace.”

Food and Beverage
After rapid sales growth of more than 24% from 2006-08, the natural and organic food and beverage category saw only slight growth in 2009 (1.8%) as the recession took its toll on nearly every sector of the consumer goods marketplace. Despite this stall, sales in this segment are forecast to grow nearly 20% from 2010 to 2012.

Only 21% of organic food buyers have cut down or eliminated organic purchasing, while 20% have switched to less expensive organic options. Meanwhile, nearly half (48%) are buying as much or more organic food than before the recession. This suggests that organic food is a core lifestyle element for many people who may make cuts in other areas of their budget before they will turn away from organics.

Personal Care
Sales of green personal care products increased by 18% from 2006-08 and similar to food and beverage, saw only a slight incline in 2009 (1.2%). This segment is poised to resume rapid growth once consumer spending begins to recover from the current downturn. One-third of all consumers have never tried organic or natural personal care products, suggesting that there is plenty of room for growth in this market.

According to Mintel’s Global New Product Database (GNPD), new products with an organic or natural claim only encompassed 5% of all beauty and personal care product launches in 2006 but increased to nearly 10% in 2008 and held steady through 2009. According to Chris Haack, “we expect to see a growing trend toward upscale green personal care products targeted to spas, salons and other high-end retail outlets in the coming years.”

SOURCE: Mintel

From product placement to "behaviour placement", Wall Street Journal Investigates


From the Wall Street Journal:

What Your TV Is Telling You to Do

NBC Universal's Shows Are Sending Viewers Signals to Recycle, Exercise and Eat Right. Why?

By AMY CHOZICK

In just one week on NBC, the detectives on "Law and Order" investigated a cash-for-clunkers scam, a nurse on "Mercy" organized a group bike ride, Al Gore made a guest appearance on "30 Rock," and "The Office" turned Dwight Schrute into a cape-wearing superhero obsessed with recycling.

Forget product placement, NBC Universal is trying "behavior placement" with some of its shows. Characters from programs such as "30 Rock" and "The Office" are acting out eco-friendly behaviors that advertisers hope will sway viewers. WSJ's Amy Chozick reports.

Coincidence? Hardly. NBC Universal planted these eco-friendly elements into scripted television shows to influence viewers and help sell ads.

The tactic—General Electric Co.'s NBC Universal calls it "behavior placement"—is designed to sway viewers to adopt actions they see modeled in their favorite shows. And it helps sell ads to marketers who want to associate their brands with a feel-good, socially aware show.

Unlike with product placement, which can seem jarring to savvy viewers, the goal is that viewers won't really notice that Tina Fey is tossing a plastic bottle into the recycle bin, or that a minor character on "Law and Order: SVU" has switched to energy-saving light bulbs. "People don't want to be hit over the head with it," says NBC Universal Chief Executive Jeff Zucker. "Putting it in programing is what makes it resonate with viewers."

TV has always had the ability to get millions of people to mimic a beloved character. Ever since Carrie Bradshaw on "Sex and the City" stopped in at the Magnolia Bakery, fans of the show wait in long lines for the once-quiet shop's $2.75 cupcakes. When Jennifer Aniston as Rachel on "Friends" cut her hair, salons across the country reported requests for the shaggy, highlighted, layered look known as "the Rachel."

This is the power of persuasion that NBCU hopes to tap. "Subtle messaging woven into shows mainstreams it, and mainstreaming is an effective way to get a message across," says Lauren Zalaznick, president of NBCU Women & Lifestyle Entertainment Networks, which oversees the effort.

Since fall 2007, network executives have been asking producers of almost every prime-time and daytime show to incorporate a green storyline at least once a year. The effort now takes place for a week in April and November. Starting April 19 this year, 40 NBC Universal outlets will feature some 100 hours of green-themed programming, including an episode of the Bravo reality series "Millionaire Matchmaker" in which a 39-year-old tycoon with an eco-friendly clothing line goes into a rage after his blind date orders red meat.

NBC's Behavior Placement

30 Rock
The Message: Small changes can reduce your carbon footprint.

What Viewers Saw: Kenneth, the page, is put in charge of reducing the carbon footprint of fictional late-night show "TGS" by 5%. Liz Lemon, Tina Fey's character, reluctantly gives up her office mini-fridge.

The Office
The Message: Get rid of plastic water bottles in the workplace.

What Viewers Saw: Employees complain about metallic-tasting reusable water bottles. "We weren't on theme, we were just on comedy," says Paul Lieberstein, an executive producer.

Top Chef
The Message: Organic, locally grown foods are better for the environment.

What Viewers Saw: Competing chefs prepare a meal for the farm workers at Blue Hill farm using organic, local fruits, vegetables and other ingredients.

In June, NBCU plans a week in which programming will emphasize healthy eating and exercise: The idea is that viewers will watch the shows and then spring into action. "It's about incorporating a marketer's message into a thematic environment," says Mike Pilot, president of sales and marketing at NBC Universal.

While the network says it tries to incorporate green programming throughout the year, the special emphasis twice a year creates an "event" that provides opportunities to advertisers, an NBC spokeswoman says. For instance, a Wal-Mart ad focusing on locally grown produce ran this past November after an episode of the medical drama "Trauma" in which emergency medic Rabbit rescues a window washer dangling precariously from a building; medics are alerted to the situation by a man sitting in his hybrid vehicle.

Behavior placement gives marketers extra incentive to advertise at a time when digital video recorders equip viewers with an unprecedented ability to skip commercials, says Jason Kanefsky, a media buyer at Havas's MPG. "You're not forcing your way into a program in any shape or form," he says. "You're just nodding your head at a program." ABC, CBS and FOX have plenty of product placement but haven't taken the step into behavior placement, network spokesmen say.

TV writers and producers are less enamored with behavior placement. Already on the hook to create holiday-themed episodes and accommodate marketers in other ways, some producers and writers grumble about additional demands. Requests for green-themed storylines come at the start of the year when programming executives sit down with producers and lay out which company-wide themes and holidays they will be working into shows.

Producers do have some leeway. "The Office," for example, embraces Valentine's Day, Halloween and Christmas but refuses to incorporate Easter since it isn't part of office culture.

Angela Bromstad, president of primetime entertainment at NBC, says her only specific request is that writers incorporate something related to the environment into a storyline and not make it a throwaway line of dialogue. "We haven't had any pushback," she says.

Paul Lieberstein, an executive producer on "The Office" who also plays the character Toby Flenderson, says he was thinking about making Dwight a superhero called "Recyclops" before network executives ordered up an environmental storyline.

"In this case it fell right into the realm of what we do," Mr. Lieberstein says. "We'd have to say no if it hurt the integrity of the show."

"Heroes" creator Tim Kring says behavior placement is easier than incorporating a specific brand, which is what the science-fiction series about ordinary people with superhuman abilities, recently did for sponsor Sprint Nextel Corp. This past fall, members of a carnival loaded a pickup truck with recyclables as Masi Oka, in the role of Hiro Nakamura, talks about giving back to the Earth. "Someone has to pay for our big, expensive television shows," Mr. Kring says.

Armed with its own data showing consumers are wiling to spend more if a brand seems eco-friendly, NBC in 2007 launched "Green Week," the programming component of a larger "Green is Universal" corporate campaign. That effort brought in an estimated $20 million in advertising revenue from 20 sponsors, according to industry estimates. Many new clients, including the nutrition bar Soy Joy, came on board, NBC says. In April 2008, the network added another week of green-themed programming, when network logos go green and on-air promos tout NBC's support for the environment. But there are no obvious cues to alert viewers to the green emphasis in programming.

To court advertisers targeting specific demographics, NBC researchers conduct regular focus groups. Viewers are broken into categories based on their favorite shows and their level of concern about the environment. "Alpha ecos" are mostly women who drive hybrids, eat organic and watch the Bravo channel. "Eco-logicals" are older viewers who have "traditional Midwestern values," drink Diet Coke, drive domestic cars and love basic-cable channel USA. When PepsiCo Inc.'s Sun Chips brand launched a compostable chip bag, executives wanted to reach young, edgy consumers who watch "30 Rock." Pepsi purchased a skit starring Kenneth, the show's lovable page. It will run during a commercial break of an eco-friendly episode this fall. "This audience has a tendency to be a little more cynical about blatant product placement," says Gannon Jones, vice president of marketing for PepsiCo's Frito-Lay unit.
Product placement on TV dates back to early soap operas sponsored by Procter & Gamble Co. Programming has been trying to get across messages, like Don't Smoke or Say No to Drugs, for almost as long. In the 1970s, libraries nationwide saw a spike in interest after the "Happy Days" character Fonzie got a library card. Last year, a character in the top-rated telenovela on NBC Universal's Telemundo, "Mas Sabe el Diablo" ("The Devil Knows Best"), had a job recruiting Latinos in New York City to participate in the 2010 Census. (Telemundo voluntarily took on the message for a group that is historically undercounted. It ran its efforts by Census authorities to make sure it had the details right.)

The messages NBC gravitates toward tend to be fairly innocuous. For instance, climate change may be controversial, but people can agree that taking care of the environment is a good thing. Same with diet and exercise: It may be controversial to ask people to quit smoking but people don't argue with taking better care of your body.

Still, do viewers really want their TV sets reminding them to recycle and go to the gym? Executives say the more seamlessly integrated the behavior is, the less it feels like the show is trying to manipulate. "The last thing you want to do is not reach the audience in the right way and make them mad at you," says NBCU's Ms. Zalaznick. Viewers don't mind if "you do a little good in the world, and you're still making your show."

For its first televised ad campaign, Vermont-based cleaning product manufacturer Seventh Generation Inc. paid NBCU to use Tori Spelling and Dean McDermott, stars of Oxygen's reality series "Tori and Dean: Home Sweet Hollywood," in a vignette about organic gardening that will run later this month during a commercial break. The corresponding episode will feature the couple gardening and composting. Dave Kimbell, Seventh Generation's chief marketing officer, says the company doesn't use product placement but sees behavior placement as a more effective way to express the brand's values and "create a dialogue" with consumers.

The trick is to not turn off viewers by being lectury or too obvious, producers say. "Late Night with Jimmy Fallon" had a segment that urged viewers to turn off their lights for five seconds to conserve energy. But each time the lights went out in the studio, a Latina janitor screamed "Ay dios mio!" and a gunshot went off killing a member of the Fallon cast. "At that hour people just want to laugh and have fun. They don't want to be preached at," the host says.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Smarter Packaging follows this website for new ideas



"www.trendwatching.com is full of new trends and ideas and also produces a monthly newsletter definitely worth reading"- smarter packaging

New Business ideas from Springwise.com : Domino's recruits fans to sell pizza


From Springwise.com

The music industry has long been putting fans to work for help with promotions and sales, and now it looks like Domino's Pizza is getting in on the action as well. A new widget launched last month lets consumers serve as affiliate marketers for the brand through their social networking pages and blogs.

Domino's UK is apparently the first brand to test the new widget, which comes from UK agency BLM Quantum, part of Arena BLM. All consumers need do is install the widget on their website, blog or social networking page, start promoting Domino’s on their personal web space, and then wait for the cash to roll in. The widget tracks all orders placed through their site and rewards consumers with 0.5 percent of every purchase.

All the marketing experts in the world can't hold a candle to the persuasive power socially connected consumers have over each other; the key is harnessing that power and putting it to work for your brand—with rewards, of course, for the consumers in question. Who will be the first brand in *your* industry to leverage the virtually limitless marketing muscle of sellsumers?

Website: www.dominos.co.uk
Contact: www.dominos.co.uk/about/contactus.aspx

Spotted by: MarketingWeek via Rick Edgars

Friday, April 2, 2010

Friends of the Blog Zinkplaat nominated for Best Rock Album




Zinkplaat has been nominated for Best Afrikaans Rock Album at the 2010 South African Music awards to be held at Sun City. For more information on the guys please visit www.zinkplaat.co.za. Good Luck!

Friend of the Blog is now on air!



Jason Rosenberg, friend of the Blog has launched his radio show, "The Jason Rosenberg Show" and will also be hosting a new reality TV show, "America's Most Wanted Deadbeats". Visit his website, www.thebiggestnews.com to listen live and see cool clips of his TV show that will air on the Network Channel soon.

Amazon may video every shipment to verify orders, resolve complaints



David Bellm -- Packaging Digest, 3/31/2010 5:36:31 PM
Amazon may be introducing a new system that will automatically shoot videos and/or photos of products being packaged, then send them to customers to verify that their order is correct.
The company may also use the system as a means of resolving customer claims of damaged or incorrect merchandise.
On Tuesday, March 30, Amazon was granted a U.S. patent for the system. It’s referred to as a “System and method for visual verification of order processing,” in the documentation, which was filed in March, 2005 listing Jonathan Shakes, Francois Rouaix and Donald Kaufman as the inventors.
According to the patent documentation, one or more images of items for an order being processed at processing station of an order fulfillment center may be captured and associated with the order. Alternatively, a short video clip may be captured of the order being packaged. An electronic notification that the order has been processed may be sent to a customer associated with the order.
The description says that the images may be sent in a variety of different forms, including email, instant messaging, fax, or cell phone.
The patent also says that different quality levels of images, or combinations of still and video images may be used for different products or situations. For example, the patent says that, in some embodiments, captured images may show the actual order processing in progress exactly as it is performed. In other embodiments, however, images may be captured showing an order in various stages of order processing, or perhaps even a quality assurance agent appearing in a captured video clip holding a processed order and smiling while giving a "thumb's up" to the camera.
According to the patent, the visual verification of order processing may only be available to customers with a premium or preferred status, or perhaps only when customers order faster, or premium shipping methods instead of standard shipping.
Perhaps more crucially, the videos could play a key role in resolving customer complaints about an order. The patent documentation says that, for example, a customer may complain that they didn't receive one of the items in the order, but with visual verification of order processing, video clips or images of the order being processed can be reviewed to verify the validity of the customer's complaint.
Amazon also anticipates the system being used to develop more effective packaging, by reviewing captured videos to help determine why a certain item breaks in shipment more frequently than other items.
The company hasn’t announced any timeframe or scope for implementation of the system.

Sustainable packaging: Reusable packaging consortium launched



By -- Packaging Digest, April 1, 2010

EURepack, the European Reusable Packaging & Reverse Logistics Consortium, was launched on March 5. As a non-profit consortium, it is open to industry regardless to their business sector, as well as to universities, research institutes, local governments, environmental and consumer rights associations. EURepack’s goal is to promote and facilitate the widespread use of reusable, returnable and recyclable packaging, in place of single-use packaging, in all industry sectors regarding the production and distribution of consumer goods.


Promoted by Free Pack Net, also a member company, the new consortium is aimed at realizing a European wide cooperation platform in support of the objectives regarding the energy and environmental sustainability set by the European Union for 2020. In co-operations with enterprises, non-governmental associations, national and local authorities, EURepack intends to contribute to the objectives set out in the European Commission “Green Paper on the Integrated Product Policy – COM (2001) 68”, which introduces the concept of Integrated Product Design.

That document directs the design and manufacturing activities towards technical solutions increasingly ecocompatible, through which even “end-of-life products” can experience a re-birth. With operational headquarters in Malpensa Business Park in the Italian province of Varese, EURepack already includes members such as the Italian environmental group Legambiente, and Italian companies ILMA Plastica, Polymer Logistics, Rhenus Logistics, Polystars as well as Università degli Studi dell’Insubria. The consortium has also among its members the German company Cartonplast.

The founding members of EURepack have unanimously appointed Massimo De Santis (current president of Free Pack Net) to lead the consortium as president. His role will entail not only planning and organizing the activities of the Consortium, but will also encompass the strategic role of spokesperson and mediator between the manufacturing industry, retail distribution, environmental groups and consumer rights associations, in order to define and implement a common and shared plan of action.

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Thursday, April 1, 2010

PEPSI CHANGES TO 'PESI' IN SPAIN


States News Service -- States News Service, February 8, 2010 Monday

The following information was released by the National Association of Convenience Stores:

Pepsi-Cola has become Pesi in Spain as the soft-drink brand capitalizes on the fact that many Spanish speakers have trouble pronouncing the second "p" in Pepsi, Advertising Age reports.

A new commercial-within-a-commercial features Spanish soccer player Fernando Torres who cannot correctly say Pepsi on camera. After repeated takes, Torres tears the second P from a Pepsi logo and informs the director that everyone he knows says "Pesi."

Last year, Pepsi renamed its flagship soft drink "Pecsi" in Argentina after the way natives said the word. "Changing Pepsi to Pecsi was a way of gaining closeness [to the consumer] and transcending a mere value message," said Ramiro Rodriguez Cohen, a creative director with BBDO Argentina, which developed the campaign for Pepsi.

"This [Spanish] campaign is based on a universal insight: Pepsi is pronounced in many different ways, as was reflected in the BBDO Argentina campaign," said a spokeswoman for Pepsi's Spanish agency, Contrapunto BBDO.

A U.S. Pepsi spokesman said the company had no other renaming campaigns scheduled. "There currently are no plans to use similar advertising in other Spanish-speaking markets," he said.