Saving for Another Day

Automated induction sealing, tape dispensing, and twist-tying machinery help this cleaning products company save money by reducing labor costs and moving short-run jobs in-house.

Shown here is a sampling of Another Day's induction-sealed containers. For at least one customer, Another Day employees apply ta
Shown here is a sampling of Another Day's induction-sealed containers. For at least one customer, Another Day employees apply ta

Judging by its www.poop-off.com Web site, Life’s Great Products LLC of San Marcos, CA, appreciates a touch of levity. But it was no laughing matter when the maker of liquid cleaning products for pets and janitorial services realized that it was losing time and money on short-run jobs it had outsourced to a contract packager.

“We have runs that may be only 1ꯠ or 2ꯠ bottles, and we’d have to take the job to our contract packager,” recalls David Lickhalter, manager of the three-person company that does business as Another Day Ltd.

“If they were doing work for other companies, they couldn’t just stop and do ours, so we’d end up leaving the [job] and coming back later to pick it up, only to find out they still hadn’t done it,” he laments. “It got to the point where it made more sense for us to buy machinery and start doing these short runs ourselves.”

Lickhalter says that longer runs, those exceeding 10ꯠ units, are still outsourced to a CP, though he prefers not to identify the company.

In July, Another Day invested in a 1kW Unifoiler Model 3000-C induction sealer from Pillar Technologies (Hartland, WI). The catalysts for buying the induction sealer were three other recently purchased machines. They include a Mark XV twist-tie unit from Plas-Ties, a division of Johnston Intl. (Santa Ana, CA); a Timesaver AFSS-852 air-operated tape dispenser from Air Fixtures (North Manchester, IN); and a semi-automatic cap tightener from Accutek Packaging Equipment (Vista, CA). All the machines were purchased after Another Day researched equipment on the Internet (see Packworld.com/go/c051).

Labor-intensive process

Another Day’s CP was not only challenged by the short runs, but also by the fact that those short runs were labor-intensive. Lickhalter explains, “The customer we’re shipping the product to requires that everything be ‘postal-secure.’ They want bottles to be induction-sealed, the caps taped down with reinforced tape, then each bottle placed inside a plastic bag and twist-tied, and placed into a corrugated shipper. That requires a lot of labor because [the CP] didn’t have automated equipment to do that.”

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