Industrial Packaging Case Studies: A Look at a Green Future

June 21st, 2011

The packaging market is expansive, and not every option works for your specific application. So, while it is important to test alternative methods, it is just as important to research all types of alternative methods before testing them in your packaging environment. Luckily, IPS Packaging has some general case studies to read up on for guidance.

Industrial Packaging Case Studies Preview:

Air PillowsAir Pillows: Searching fo an earth-friendly solution to polyurethane packaging? Go behind the scenes with a quick case study on Air Pillows.

Foam Packaging: An electronics/appliances company was looking to recycle foam scrap. After coming to IPS Packaging to find an alternative to their waste stream dilemma, they were pleasantly surprised to find out that sometimes, foam can be green.

Stretch Film: Maximize performance and savings with automatic stretch wrapping machines using the IPS Stretch Film Comparison Guide Online.

To read more case studies, check us out online. If you would like to speak to a packaging specialist or a sustainable packaging specialist, call us at 800.277.7007.

Industrial Packaging Webinars: Podcasting Now

June 16th, 2011

IPS Packaging is podcasting all industrial packaging webinars on iTunes for free. Adding to the episode list will be updates on new products, new ideas in the market and other helpful information. Need information on foam in place packaging or bagging machines? Check out two past episodes on iTunes.

Foam in Place WebinarGet the latest packaging technology information behind a new foam in place brand on the market. Boasting five degrees of separation from current competitors, our foam in place packaging offers smart technology that features:

  • Telemetry
  • Bar Coding
  • Advanced Software

For more information on foam in place packaging check out the recorded webinar by two IPS Protective Packaging Specialists online by subscribing to the podcast or viewing iPack TV.

Bagging Systems WebinarMost packaging operations are still struggling with making the switch to automated systems. Some key benefits of cost savings that many do not know can certainly change packaging decision makers’ minds. For instance, one bagging machine can complete the same amount of work as five operators. To learn about the competitive advantages of bagging machines, such as:

  • Improved Quality Control
  • Increased Inventory Management
  • Increased Production Rates
  • Process Improvements and Nonproprietary Parts
  • Lowered Total Pack Out Costs

To find out more information on industrial packaging solutions, visit IPS Packaging. To tune into packaging podcasts, check out IPS Packaging on iTunes.

Industrial Packaging Webinars: June’s Behind Bagging Systems

May 23rd, 2011
MAX Bagging System

IPS Packaging offers free webinars. June's webinar covers Bagging Systems: Behind the Scenes.

IPS Packaging presents an industrial packaging webinar discussing the benefits of bagging systems as packaging solutions. This packaging webinar will give a detailed analysis packed with:

  • Cost Savings Initiatives
  • Process Improvements
  • Automation Details
  • Labor Savings Details
  • Benefits to Bagging Systems
  • Proven Case Studies

Don’t miss our bagging systems webinar on June 9, 2011 at 10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Sign up today for our free packaging webinar.

Maximizing Truckloads: Industrial Packaging Combats Gas Prices

May 18th, 2011
Shipping Trucks

IPS Packaging conducts beginning to end analysis by utilizing different industrial packaging supplies to maximize truckloads.

(Contributing Information from Damage Prevention Specialist, Richardson Garrett with IPS Packaging) — With gas prices skyrocketing 33.1 percent from the previous year (New York Times), flooding of the Mississippi impacting the logistics of transportation schedules and overall inflation continuing to rise, businesses are beginning to analyze their beginning to end packaging process. Shipment loads have increased; therefore, the need to maximize loads per truck has also increased. Businesses are searching for a way to transport more on their truckloads, however, issues with weight restrictions make this task difficult. The Department of Transportation (DOT) has regulated that “federal commercial vehicle maximum standards on the Interstate Highway System” (FHWA) should be:

  • Single Axel: 20,000 pounds
  • Tandem Axle: 34,000 pounds
  • Gross Vehicle Weight: 80,000 pounds

**It is important to note that weight and size standards have slight variations depending on particular states, routes, vehicles or operations.

With such tight regulations, shifts in transit can be detrimental to the pockets of business owners. Shifts in transit that contribute to fluctuation with axel weights can be avoided by using different industrial packaging supplies such as dunnage air bags. By using air bags to lock loads in place, the chance of incurring fines at weigh stations drops significantly. With added benefits of damage prevention, air bags not only improve your beginning to end packaging analysis, but they also contribute to corporate and green initiatives for most companies. Backed by the Sustainable Forestry Initiative, air bags are a green-friendly product with a purpose.

For a more in-depth look at current gas prices, visit the U.S. Energy Information Administration. For more information on industrial packaging or dunnage air bags, go to www.ipack.com. To schedule a beginning to end analysis of your industrial packaging operation, contact one of our representatives at sales@ipack.com.

Walmart Sustainability Expo 2011: Sustainable Packaging is Going to Start Saving GREEN

April 13th, 2011

IPS Visits the Walmart Sustainability Expo

IPS Packaging (Booth #605) visits the Walmart Sustainability Expo in Arkansas.

IPS Packaging was proud to showcase at the Walmart/Sam’s Club Sustainability Expo this week in Arkansas. With innovative packaging ideas consistently making their debut, this expo proves to be breaking grounds for all those looking to grow the sustainable packaging industry. Major hot topics in industrial packaging have included:
  • Damage Prevention
  • Accountability
  • Defining “Eco-Packaging
  • Process Improvements
  • Cost Containment

With topics such as these, we have found ourselves to be quite excited about the route that packaging companies are beginning to take towards innovation and cost containment. Going green may certainly start to save you “green” as well.

Today is the last day of the expo. If you are in the area, please stop by our booth (#605). We’d love to chat with you about our beginning to end analysis of packaging operations. To view more information on the expo, check us on on our ipack website. Follow us on Twitter, or check out our Twitter List for the Expo @IPSPackaging/SusExpo2011.

March Madness Customer Bracket Challenge at IPS Packaging

March 15th, 2011
March Madness Customer Challenge

IPS Packaging hosts the March Madness Customer Bracket Challenge

March Madness is in full swing at IPS Packaging. We are offering our customers the chance to enter to win in a NCAA College Hoops Bracket Challenge. Have you watched the heartbreaking upsets this season, or do you just guess based off of your favorite mascot? Whatever the case, if you are an NCAA diehard, now is your chance to win some free money! IPS Packaging is offering the following prizes to the winning brackets:

First Place: $150 Visa Gift Card
Second Place: $100 Visa Gift Card
Third Place: $50 Visa Gift Card

If you think you have a shot, don’t be afraid to enter online at our ESPN Bracket Challenge. Get in the game by Wednesday, March 16, 2011! Find out more information on our ESPN Challenge by checking us out on Facebook and Twitter. Be sure to get in to win by tomorrow!

Defining “Green” Packaging: Reducing, Reusing and Recycling, Oh My!

March 7th, 2011

It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to observe that everything in our culture is beginning to go green: cars, furniture, food, paper, electronics and other industries are changing their outlook on what it means to be “environmentally-friendly.” Packaging is no different. In fact, packaging is the main source driving the green market. Come to think of it, packaging is probably one of the most important industries to contribute to the demand of going green. Comprehensively, let’s sift through the greenwashing, the mixed terminology and the misguided connotations of what “going green” really means for packaging.

Recyclable Packaging

Green or Greenwashed? Do you know the difference?

A Quick Guide to Green Packaging Terms:

  • Bagassee: The remains of sugar cane pulp after the juice is extracted. This is used to make bio-products such as packaging supplies, paper products, and absorbent products.
  • Biocompostable: Paper and Plastic products, which will biodegrade and disintegrate completely and safely when put into a municipal or commercial facility (like yard waste or food scraps). This action is usually completed within 90 days however, it will be faster if products are in smaller pieces.
  • Biodegradable: Products that, over time, will disintegrate completely back into the earth as its original organic components. This process usually is caused by bacteria or sunlight.
  • Bioplastic: Plastics made from corn, potato or other annually renewable sources which are compostable and biodegradable.
  • Carbon Footprint: A measure of impact on the environment in terms of the amount of greenhouse gases produced, measured in units of carbon dioxide.
  • Compost: A mixture of various decaying organic substances, such as dead leaves, that will usually be used for fertilizing soil.
  • Conservation: Preserving and renewing, when possible both human and natural resources.
  • Landfill: An area where waste is dumped and eventually covered with dirt and topsoil.
  • Eco-Efficiency: The ability to do more, with less of our resources, such as using candles instead of lightbulbs, or opening windows instead of using the air conditioner.
  • Recyclable: Materials or products that, after serving their original purpose, still have usable physical or chemical properties. These items can be reused or remanufactured to make new products.
  • Source Reduction: Source Reduction, also know as “waste prevention,” is the practice of designing, manufacturing, purchasing, or using materials (such as products and packaging) in ways that reduce the amount or toxicity of trash created. Reusing items is another way to stop waste at the source because it delays or avoids that item’s entry in the waste collection and disposal system.

With that quick terminology guide on your hands, coupled with all green buying guides for household products, the idea of “going green” can sometimes be overwhelming, can’t it? Especially those who are not used to the concept, what it means or just how much commitment it entails. Some fun facts to keep in mind that may truly shock you when it comes to the packaging industry:

  1. Sustainable Packaging policies have grown 13 percent in 3 years.
  2. Packaging makes up one-third of consumer trash in the United States.
  3. Each United States citizen produces approximately 4.5 pounds of waste per day.

It’s obvious. Being green means being committed. It means being committed to finding alternative sources, reusable products and ground-breaking technology. It means being steadfast in the pursuit of decreasing packaging processes, from the packaging itself to the transportation of the product.

Teddy Roosevelt once said, “I recognize the right and duty of this generation to develop and use our natural resources, but I do not recognize the right to waste them, or to rob by wasteful use, the generations that come after us.”

This right and duty not only falls on the shoulders of the global community, but on the decision makers in key industries. So, as a packaging professional, how do you define going “green?” What steps have you made to go green this year with your packaging operation? Do you have questions regarding what it means to actually be committed to your company’s green initiatives for the 2011 year?

Dunnage Air Bags: A Surprisingly Green Packaging Tool

Green Stretch Film: It Exists! Sustainable Solutions

Looking for more information on going green? Check out our green initiatives online, and share your opinion with us on your corporate goals for 2011. Whether it be source reduction, waste prevention or any other green initiative in packaging, IPS finds sustainable solutions for your bottom line.

Technology in Packaging: Changing the Packaging Industry One Gigabyte at a Time

February 23rd, 2011
Technology in Packaging

Packaging has always been defined as "the technology and art for preparing a commodity for convenient transport, storage, and sale" (Encyclopedia Britannica Online).

In an industry that many consider to be historically behind on technological advances, it is becoming increasingly apparent that too many misconceptions are being made about packaging. If you think I am wrong, take a look at the world around you.

In the food and beverage industry alone, the global market for packaging technology expects to grow to $23.474 million by 2015 (Markets and Markets Data, 2010). Studies back in 2009 illustrated the active and intelligent packaging demand climbing 8.3 percent annually through 2013 in the United States alone (driven mostly by the food and beverage industry). With smart packaging being seen in intelligent plastics that change color when food loses its freshness, wireless charging consumer packaging that measure packaging contents, and other various electronic modifications that are being made as I write, it is important to realize that while mainstream packaging has changed, industrial packaging is also changing.

IPS Packaging makes it a priority to stay abreast of packaging trends, technologies and cost savings initiatives. In fact, MOST of the time consumers can cut costs by simply understanding the new packaging technology that is available on the market. For example, by adding a technological upgrade to existing ITW Muller machines, consumers can capture critical performance data needed in order to reduce costs. The OctoMAX enhancement can be added and retrofitted for most existing Octopus Stretch Wrapping Machines. By using this simple upgrade, consumers can:

  • Drive down film costs
  • Optimize load containment
  • Reduce unplanned maintenance
  • Increase productivity
  • Ensure maximum performance out of stretch wrap equipment and film

Other industrial packaging enhancements such as IPS Packaging’s Foam in Place technology, UID labels, ShockWatch products, Tamper-Evident tape products, and other smart technology packaging products, consumers can rest assured that IPS Packaging’s product line always stays on the cutting-edge of packaging technology. In the digital age we live in, it seems absurd to lag behind in packaging technological upgrades. Not to mention, technology that can lower bottom line costs!

For more information on packaging technology, new packaging trends or other product enhancements, connect with us online through LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter or E-mail us at: sales@ipack.com. If you would like to speak to one of our representatives, feel free to call 1.888.922.1622.

Check Your Packaging Resources: Are You Getting All of the Information?

February 8th, 2011
Online Education

Do you know all of the different ways to connect with IPS Packaging online? Stay "in the know" with packaging updates, product information, webinars and other helpful packaging news by connecting with us through the cloud.

The “Cloud,” otherwise known as the Internet, is beginning to take over.  With e-commerce sales dramatically increasing, social networking becoming a B2B common practice, and viral video plaguing every nook and cranny of the online community, IPS is setting a new standard for the online packaging industry.   So, how do you discover knowledge about the packaging industry? The answer is simple: “be in the know.”

IPS Packaging has worked hard to establish ways to connect online. Customer service being one our main priorities, we are always seeking to discuss, examine, provide and learn about new packaging technologies, products and services.

Did you know that IPS Packaging has…

  • A Twitter feed that will start promoting coupon codes and other various promotions throughout the year?
  • A LinkedIn page that features our employees, products, twitter feeds and other information on our company?
  • A Facebook page that frequently advertises flyers, e-mail blasts and other production items?
  • A YouTube channel that shows helpful information on our products?
  • An iPack TV Channel on our website that also illustrates how-to’s and product information?

Not to mention, our new additions to the “Unpack the Knowledge” campaign featuring:

  • A Mobile App of our catalog (available now for the iPod, iPhone and iPad).
  • A monthly newsletter that features ROI stories, online interaction points, current market trends and IPS promotions.
  • Bi-monthly webinars discussing packaging topics.
  • Podcasts that feature our webinars and other packaging information.

Get “in the know” today with IPS Packaging by contacting us online at sales@ipack.com for more information.

Frozen Food Industry Predictions Impact the Need for Packaging Products: A Glimpse Ahead to 2015 Technology

February 8th, 2011
Frozen Food Industry

The Frozen Food Industry is expected to grow by 2015. Packaging for this industry can also be expected to enter the forefront of conversation.

The frozen food market is currently valued at an estimated $218.41 billion. With a predicted increase to $216.50 billion by 2015, (Markets and Markets Study) it can be determined that various stakeholders in this market, such as frozen food packaging manufactures, will experience a jolt in business in the upcoming years.

Packaging Digest’s Linda Casey investigated the study further (Packaging Digest Report); however, to understand the impact of this market data on the packaging industry, it is important to look at the facts.

Frozen food product segmentation breaks down into different categories. Ranging from fruits and vegetables to fish and ready meals, the frozen food industry has a wide variety of needs when it comes to packaging. As packaging professionals who stay up on current trends and products, IPS Packaging is committed to being an active participant in helping the frozen food industry reach a higher revenue by 2015.

Moreover, if the frozen food industry is to accurately package products that would be approved by the FDA, it seems logical that technology fitting for the prospective 2015 revenue would need to be present now. Luckily, it is present; sadly, many are not equipped with the knowledge of a well-made temperature monitoring product.

To fully grasp the benefits of our temperature monitoring products and how they can impact the frozen food industry, consider these packaging benefits:

  • Our products are cost-effective, cutting-edge and disposable.
  • Some products include an 8 threshold temperature monitoring system.
  • Our products indicate when temperatures have reached below a pre-determined threshold.
  • Our products also indicate when temperatures have reached above an extreme threshold.

With benefits such as these, those in the frozen food industry cannot afford to not have this packaging product at their disposal. To find out more information on IPS Packaging’s temperature measuring packaging products (The TempMark 8 ColdMark, WarmMark, WarmMark Duo, WarmMark Long Run and HeatWatch) call a packaging representative at 1.888.922.1622.