Colgate: Packaging’s Day Has Come

Colgate-Palmolive has made sustainable packaging a key priority. From recyclable toothpaste tubes to aluminum bottles for mouthwash, they’re locked in on eliminating plastic waste and delighting consumers.

This year’s View from the Top feature focused on Colgate-Palmolive. Shown here left to right are Senior Global Design Manager Jadalia Britto, Chief Technology Officer Patricia Verduin, Director of Global Packaging Innovation and Sustainability Greg Corra, and Jose Luis Molinar, Global Packaging Director Personal & Home Care.
This year’s View from the Top feature focused on Colgate-Palmolive. Shown here left to right are Senior Global Design Manager Jadalia Britto, Chief Technology Officer Patricia Verduin, Director of Global Packaging Innovation and Sustainability Greg Corra, and Jose Luis Molinar, Global Packaging Director Personal & Home Care.

“Packaging is a field whose day has come.”

That simple and straightforward statement by Colgate-Palmolive’s Chief Technology Officer Patricia Verduin neatly sums up the views shared by all five of the Colgate executives I talked with recently in preparing this year’s View from the Top feature.

“It’s always been viewed as an applied engineering field, if you will,” Verduin continues in her assessment of packaging’s status. “But I think this is an age where packaging changes the way the world buys products, whether it’s making E-Commerce a great experience or it’s addressing the whole plastic waste issue. More than ever before, it’s changing the way people engage with our brands. From Colgate to Tom’s of Maine to Fabuloso to Hill’s, the packaging has to deliver against the promise of our brands and our company purpose as a caring, innovative growth company reimagining a healthier future for all people, their pets, and our planet.”

Colgate’s Whitening Pen debuted in E-Commerce channels. A good example of a SIOC (Ships in Own Container), its packaging is entirely paperboard, including an inner tray made of 100% compostable PaperFoam.Colgate’s Whitening Pen debuted in E-Commerce channels. A good example of a SIOC (Ships in Own Container), its packaging is entirely paperboard, including an inner tray made of 100% compostable PaperFoam.Working out of Colgate’s Piscataway, N.J., Global Technology Campus, Verduin oversees global R&D, Packaging, and Design. “These are the arms and legs of innovation, the people who are really doing innovation with their pencils and CAD drawings and knowledge,” says Verduin. Noting that this organizational structure has only been in place for a few years, she says it’s really been powerful to have all three of these functional groups together.

“It’s all about having the product formulators, the brand designers, the user experience people, and the packaging engineers and developers all in the same room at the same time and all developing against a common brief,” says Verduin. “Too often in the past the practice was to make the formula and throw it over the wall to the packaging people, who, when they’d come up with a package, would toss it over to the design team for graphics. It just doesn’t work that way anymore. The formulas are too complicated and the delivery mechanisms too varied.”

Colgate-Palmolive is a global company that competes in the oral care, home care, personal care, and pet nutrition categories. With sales of nearly $16 billion, the company supplies products to more than 200 countries and territories and has 40+ manufacturing facilities worldwide, each with its own team of engineers. Like most Consumer Packaged Goods companies, Colgate places a premium on both innovation and sustainability. Somewhat atypically, however, the firm doesn’t have one director of packaging innovation and another of sustainability. Instead, it has a Director of Global Packaging Innovation and Sustainability, the title held by Greg Corra. When asked why things are organized this way, he has this to say: “We believe packaging innovation is the key to achieving Colgate’s purpose of reimagining a healthier future and that our sustainability strategy needs to underpin all aspects of our packaging strategy.”

“Underpin” is a bit of an understatement. The extent to which sustainability shapes all things packaging at Colgate is evident if we look at some of the packages recently introduced by the New York-based firm. Many of these are packages for oral care products, which should come as no surprise. Colgate’s largest category, oral care represented 46% of the firm’s sales in 2019. Let’s start with toothbrushes, since Colgate sells about 3 billion of them every year, two-thirds of them made in-house.

In a category where the plastic blisterpack is the dominant packaging format, the launch of Colgate Keep in a wet-fiber thermoformed package made of sugarcane and wood fiber was notable to say the least. Shown here is the front of the starter kit and the back of the two-count refill pack.In a category where the plastic blisterpack is the dominant packaging format, the launch of Colgate Keep in a wet-fiber thermoformed package made of sugarcane and wood fiber was notable to say the least. Shown here is the front of the starter kit and the back of the two-count refill pack.Replaceable heads
Just reaching U.S. consumers this winter is Colgate Keep, a line of replaceable-head manual toothbrushes featuring an aluminum handle that’s designed to be long lasting for 80% less plastic waste. A new replacement head can be snapped on when bristles are worn. Colgate is launching both a starter kit, which has the aluminum handle with two brush heads, as well as a two-count refill pack sans handle.

The concept of a more permanent and reusable handle made of aluminum is in itself a significant step toward putting less plastic into the solid waste stream. But our interest here is in the fiber-based packaging, which, in a category dominated almost exclusively by plastic blister-packs, is a profound departure.

“The first challenge in our brief was ‘Hey, guys, we need to get out of a plastic blister,’” says Senior Global Design Manager Jadalia Britto. “That led, of course, to a series of questions about the options. How can we use fiber? Can we use recyclable paper? How do we still get premium finish and color? We really had to challenge our external partners to help us find the answers.”

Britto says that her particular responsibility in projects like this is the look, tone, and feel of the package. “It’s all about how to treat the master brand,” she notes. “Then I work closely with our industrial designers to execute on the design intent.”

The package that emerged for the Keep starter kit is a peggable all-fiber tub and lid that stands 229 mm tall, 70 mm wide, and 26 mm deep (9.01 x 2.75 x 1.02 in.). Sourced from sugarcane and wood fiber, the tub is wet-fiber thermoformed by China’s LVHE Packaging Technology Co. Ltd., an impressive specialist in researching, manufacturing, and marketing biodegradable materials and products. The lid, a 400 gsm paperboard containing 60% recycled content, is heat sealed to the tub. Graphics are printed UV offset in six colors plus a matte varnish. As for putting the products into the packs, this is done for now by an outside contractor in a semi-automated process. The starter kit sells for $9.99 and the replacement pack for $4.99.

“From start to launch, including the time we had to spend exploring material options, it took about eight months,” says Britto. “We’re getting faster with getting these things out the door.”

Elsewhere in the oral care category is another brand new product called Optic White Overnight Teeth Whitening Pen. The product itself is a 2.5-mL aluminum and plastic cylinder in an injection-molded stand. Packaging, once again, is entirely paperboard, including an inner tray made of 100% compostable PaperFoam . Based in the Netherlands but with manufacturing facilities in countries including the U.S., PaperFoam mixes four bio-based ingredients into a thick paste that is then injected into a custom aluminum mold and baked at about 400 deg F. The manufacturing process is said to be energy-efficient, and the resulting part provides the cushioning properties of plastic foam alternatives but is TUV-certified as compostable in home or industrial settings and is UL-validated as recyclable.

A SIOC designed specifically for E-Commerce, the Smile Box holds up to four cartons of toothpaste.A SIOC designed specifically for E-Commerce, the Smile Box holds up to four cartons of toothpaste.The other packaging component for the whitening pen is a 24-point SBS sleeve with two locking tabs. The inner tray holding the pen and stand slides into this sleeve. Supplied by Multi-Pack Solutions, it’s offset printed in seven colors with a foil stamp plus varnish. “We definitely focused on a recycled paperboard,” says Britto. “And the cold foil accents bring a nice element of premiumness without interfering with recyclability.”

When asked if the team ever thought about a clear package for the whitening pen, considering how consumers respond to product visibility, Britto says, “I wouldn’t say we never considered it, but from the perspective of graphic impact it would have had its limitations. This printed paperboard says Colgate Red. Also, when I thought about E-Commerce, I wanted the package to stand out in a sea of blues and whites. I really wanted that color. And I wanted that curved shape, even though it complicates a number of things compared to a simple rectangular carton. We almost bailed on the curve at one point, but we pushed ahead and solved it because it delivers on the premium experience that we were after.”

Ships In Own Container
Since the whitening pen debuted as an E-Commerce item, Colgate Director of E-Commerce Bruce Cummings was a key contributor on the team behind its development. “Early on, we considered a carton into a corrugated box,” says Cummings. “But by launch we’d come up with the red mailer, which is lighter and has that easy-open tear strip. Then comes the Colgate-Red sleeve, out of which the inner foam tray smoothly slides out. Compact and compelling, it’s an experience that resembles an elegant process of unboxing.”

Cummings says the team would have gone with a paper mailer rather than the polypropylene air-filled wrap had COVID-19 not messed with the supply chain as it did. “The idea is that once the unboxing experience is complete the consumer can put all of the packaging into the paper recycle stream,” notes Cummings. He adds that the paper mailer is now in the works.

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