Executing 'design to manufacture'

Honeywell turns to a ‘virtual factory’ in creating products that organize mom’s car. A contract packager takes the point in assuring that a design concept works in production.

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“Design to manufacture” describes a capability that leading-edge contract packagers are adding to their stable of services. In simplest terms, it involves engineering a package design cost-effectively to stay on budget, yet retain the appearance of the design prototype.

The development of a line of car-care products for Honeywell’s Consumer Products Group offers a glimpse of the design-to-manufacture approach in action. Contract packager Rand Direct took a branding agency’s design concept for the product line and refined it to work on packaging lines. Then the co-packer managed engineering and production operations, and took responsibility for shipment of goods.

These more sophisticated contract-packaging services helped Honeywell achieve several results:



Emerging trends

In creating its Blink brand of “Mom’s Car Solutions,” Honeywell responded to internal research showing that whereas men treat their cars as a reflection of personal identity, women—in particular, moms—see their vehicle as an extension of home. Moms expressed a desire for convenience products to help keep their cars cleaner and more organized.

A related trend, playing out in stores, is an evolution in packaging tactics to get women’s attention—even in traditionally male-dominated aisles like auto-aftermarket products. Women represent 80% of mass-market shoppers and often, they purchase the products men use. Product and category managers with especially keen eyes are discovering subtle opportunities to create packaging systems in otherwise male-dominated categories that attract women as both shopper and consumer—in the process introducing them to aisles they might not otherwise visit.

Honeywell worked with 4sight, a product and package innovation firm, to clarify market needs and analyze women’s car-cleaning and organization habits, wants, and purchase behavior. The redefining of the demographic category of “women” to “soccer moms”—the 24/7 on-the-go mom—revealed new insights that 4sight translated into key product platforms and opportunities as the basis for package design and development.

“We discovered that these moms are not interested in traditional car-care cleaning products,” says Jim Brown, Honeywell Consumer Products Group director, new product marketing. “There just isn’t enough time in the day for busy moms to spend it aggressively cleaning the family car. Plus, it’s often cost- and time-prohibitive to have it cleaned professionally.”

Those concerns spurred development of the Blink product family. It includes Mess Lifters stain remover auto interior wipes, Spill Grabbers superabsorbent wipes, Trash Tossers easy clip drawstring litterbags, Smudge Cleaners fingerprint removers, and Tidy Totes carry bags. They help “soccer moms” organize their hectic lives in the car while transporting kids to athletic fields and other activities.

The packaging designs are decidedly feminine-looking and combine function with fun. For example, the clip on the back of the Trash Tossers thermoform package enables the package to hang from rear pockets of the front seats; the clip is lavender and shaped like a bow.

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