Your productโs packaging can make or break a sale. If your packaging is engaging, polished, and attractive, itโs an easy way to differentiate yourself from others on the shelf and earn that treasured space in their shopping carts.
But if the packaging isnโt engaging, thereโs a good chance that shoppers will never give it a second look, causing your well-intentioned design to fall into the sea of background noise and advertising static that we block out as we shop.
Engaging customers with packaging isnโt as difficult of a goal as it soundsโprovided you approach your packaging design with a plan.
1. Keep Things Consistent
Consistency in design is important, of course. You know this already, so we wonโt belabor the point. Make sure the design elements you include are consistent with your established brand.
- Keep packaging language similar to the tone and style you use on your website and other marketing materials.
- Play into recognizable brand colors, logos, images, or other visual elements that customers associate with your brand.
- Reinforce the company goals that define your brand; for example, if your company is committed to sustainability, note on the package that the product is made of recycled or post-consumer materials.
Consider consistency the minimum standard for your packaging design. While not every consumer will spot brand inconsistencies, many willโand if they do, youโll lose some of the valuable brand equity you worked so hard to build in your other channels.
2. Incorporate Engaging Sensory Elements
Letโs face itโshopping can be boring. You know it, we know it, and the customers know it.
But as a packaging designer, itโs your job to make shoppers forget what they know. Your goal is to energize the shopping experience and get them excited about purchasing your product.
An easy way to do this is to engage their senses. Visual elements are a given but does your product have other unique features? Whatโs it made of? Does it feature a nice aroma or other sensory information you can leverage?
Look for these opportunities in your products and design your packaging to support them.
As a packaging designer, your goal is to give customers as much information as possible about the product. Visual elements are a given, but you can push your design to the next level by incorporating elements that activate a shopperโs senses.
Include cut-out windows that let them feel the productโs material. If there are any interactive features that the user could try, leave those exposed and let them experiment. If scents are a product feature (think candles or room fresheners) make sure itโs easy for shoppers to smell without compromising the integrity of the package.
The better your customers understand your product, the more likely youโll bust through that pesky last-minute purchasing resistance.
3. Create a Design Narrative Across Packaging Elements
Like the other aspects of your marketing, your packaging design should take shoppers on a journey. Of course, youโll want to place your primary value propositions front and center on the packaging face. Still, youโll also want to support those key selling points with additional details throughout your packaging layout.
For example, consider something as simple as a box of granola bars. The box will feature the brand name, logo, and image prominently on the boxโs face, along with other key selling points, like 100% natural or gluten-free.
But what about the other sides? What information should be included?
To get a feel for this, you must consider how users examine packaging. Most pick up a box and look at the front first. From there, theyโll look at the sides, top, and even bottom to see what other details may be pertinent to the buying decision. Incorporate more details across each side in order of relevance to the consumer. In the case of our granola bars:
- Front: Product image, logo, brand name
- Side A: Nutrition label and ingredient list
- Side B: Brand story, history, or testimonials
- Top/Bottom: Ancillary details, brand information, or other suggestions, such as recipes
The idea is to increase their time spent interacting with the product while sharing vital brand details.
And hereโs the thingโif customers pick up your product and examine it, youโre halfway there. Consumers donโt examine packages and products that they have no interest in. If youโve reached the point where theyโre holding the package, feeling the texture, and reading the copy, youโre well on your way to a purchase.
4. Donโt Be Afraid to Be Different
Above all, we suggest taking a page out of Appleโs playbook: Think different.
This famous sloganโgrammatically incorrect though it may beโrepresents the biggest reason Apple was so successful. They werenโt afraid to do things differently, and they werenโt afraid to explore new territory with their productsโor the packaging that housed them.
In fact, Steve Jobs was famous for his strict regulation of each Apple productโs packaging. As a customer experience champion, Jobs believed that packaging design played a crucial role in a customerโs perception of the product within. There are stories of a secret room at Apple devoted entirely to improving the customerโs unboxing experience. (Now thatโs dedication to design!)
Apple wouldnโt have taken off the way it did if Jobs hadnโt walked the road less traveled, and the same can be said about your own brand.
Donโt be afraid to shake things up and go against conventional logic to attract a customerโs interest. Experiment with eye-catching layouts. Ditch cheap consumer plastics and use softer textiles that stand out on the shelf. Look at what your competitors are doing and see how you can design your product to fill the niches they arenโt addressing.
Look at it another way: Common packaging design advice tells brands how to fit in, but your goal should be to stand out.
Engaging Customers With Packaging Design
In truth, the last thing shoppers want to do is stand in the aisle debating the merits of fabric softener A versus fabric softener B. Nevertheless, these product comparisons are more a matter of necessity for shoppers, so itโs beneficial for everyone to make the process as engaging and interesting as possible. Keep these tips in mind and donโt be afraid to experiment.
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