The packaging
Packaging is that wrapper used to store and carry a good so that it remains intact. According to the Italian legislation, in particular, the packaging is "the product, consisting of materials of any nature, used to contain and protect specific goods, from raw materials to finished products, to allow their manipulation and their delivery from the producer to the consumer or user and to ensure their submission".
Depending on the purpose that it covers you can classify packaging into three categories: primary, secondary and tertiary.
For primary packaging we mean packaging for sales, a packaging conceived so as to constitute a selling unit at the selling point for the end user. It is, therefore, a type of packaging which is very often in direct contact with the goods, and this makes it difficult to distinguish between container and content. Fall into this category, for example, bottles and beverage cans, glass bottles for perfumes, milk cartons, packets of cigarettes or packs of biscuits.
PRIMARY PACKAGING
For primary packaging we mean packaging for sales, a packaging conceived so as to constitute a selling unit at the selling point for the end user. It is, therefore, a type of packaging which is very often in direct contact with the goods, and this makes it difficult to distinguish between container and content. Fall into this category, for example, bottles and beverage cans, glass bottles for perfumes, milk cartons, packets of cigarettes or packs of biscuits.
SECONDARY PACKAGING
Secondary packaging is often referred to as multi-pack. It collects multiple selling units and can be used from the consumer to purchase directly or to facilitate shelves replenishment in the store. In this case, the packaging can be removed without altering the characteristics of the product and constitutes both the selling unit destined to the final user and the one destined to the retailer. Examples of secondary packaging are packs for snacks or containing water bottles, or cartons of cigarettes containing 10 packets.
TERTIARY PACKAGING
By the term tertiary packaging we identify the packaging for the transport, namely the casing designed so as to facilitate transport of a number of selling units or multiple packagings. It is, therefore, a type of packaging intended for the transport of goods in a safe manner, preserving the integrity of the products, and restricted largely to the use within the distribution chain since it does not arrive to the end user. Examples are the pallets of packages or boxes containing different packagings.
The evolution of packaging
Packaging is that wrapper used to store and carry a good so that it remains intact. According to the Italian legislation, in particular, the packaging is "the product, consisting of materials of any nature, used to contain and protect specific goods, from raw materials to finished products, to allow their manipulation and their delivery from the producer to the consumer or user and to ensure their submission".
Depending on the purpose that it covers you can classify packaging into three categories: primary, secondary and tertiary.
For primary packaging we mean packaging for sales, a packaging conceived so as to constitute a selling unit at the selling point for the end user. It is, therefore, a type of packaging which is very often in direct contact with the goods, and this makes it difficult to distinguish between container and content. Fall into this category, for example, bottles and beverage cans, glass bottles for perfumes, milk cartons, packets of cigarettes or packs of biscuits.
Capitalism and industrialization changed the way of conceiving the object. It transformed into goods to be transported from the production site to the place of sale. In this light, two new requirements spread: the protection of items during long transportations, exposure and buying in stores.
The packaging answered back by becoming a symbol of functionality and aesthetics. Maintaining its primary purpose, protecting the goods, the packaging began to fill the role of persuading consumers to buy that particular product over another.
In the twentieth century the production techniques were so developed to allow the realization of every kind of packages. This is useful not only to sell the product but also to respond to new needs and adapt to changes in the tastes of different epochs.
At the beginning of the twentieth century, the packaging wasn't only asked to protect the contents during transport. It was also asked to submit it to the purchaser fulfilling his visual desire.
The beauty became necessary for packaging, which was perceived as an object totally independent from its content.
The packaging had its first change in the thirties, when the United States, characterized by mass market and consumption, began to look with increasing interest to it. For the first time the package is considered in its appearance. It is specially designed to better sell a product, without any other purpose. It became a silent salesman. It became a person not endowed with speech, but ready to launch messages and able to make himself understood.
The real transformation of the packaging world came after the war, particularly in the fifties, the moment in which Europe also started to experience mass consumption. New relationships start to establish between the different actors of the market (manufacturer, buyer, merchandise and point of sale). The center of the system is the packaging that, on the one hand, seeks direct dialogue with the consumer, in need of reassurance because he has lost all contact with the place and the subjects of production.
On the other hand, it responds to distribution needs, the problems of storage and disposal of the products in the store. In addition, the increase in the number of goods necessitated a distinctive feature, the packaging itself, to allow the individual products to be recognizable and distinct from the others. From this period on, you could start talking about modern packaging. "The overall form of packaging and submitting articles to offer to the public, in order to convince the consumer to buy the product and/or facilitate its handling and use" (Treccani). It is no longer simply a form, albeit evolved, of packing born with the sole purpose of allowing the safe movement of goods. It becomes a form of communication, a tool that can convey messages that attract and persuade the consumer to purchase that particular product.
Packaging in the beauty market
In the beauty market, perhaps more than in other sectors, the packaging plays a key role in convincing consumers.
In perfumery, in fact, the primary packaging is essential. It supports the brand in communicating the idea behind the product and the message behind the fragrance. In particular, the packaging integrates the brand, which is all in the world of fragrances. It has to fit the brand image and value it. This, in order to study the consumer targets and the type of fragrance to create the most suitable bottle.
So, investing time and resources in the creation of a bottle can determine success or failure of a perfume brand.
Stocksmetic: the design of packaging
Stocksmetic.com is an online sales site that caters primarily to the B2B market. It is born from the idea of proposing a primary packaging and sophisticated design. With small quantities in mind, we create products for the fragrance industry, skincare and pharmaceutical sectors.
On Stocksmetic.com, we offer a wide selection of items divided into six product lines: