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  • What do you need to include in a packaging design proposal? We discuss the dicovery phase of your packaging proposal in this episode, everything that is required and everything you need to consider before sharing with a potential packaging design client.

    How to consider timelines, budgets, quantities, and create a visual language for your client to communicate with you regarding their design desires. Packaging design requires many considerations and the tighter the parameters you set up for your packaging design project, the better your design will be.

    Listen and drop us a line with any thoughts, questions, or anything you'd like to learn more about.

    Connect with Evelio on LinkedIn

    Support our sponsor IDPdirect and download their sustainable packaging guide.

  • How do you design packaging? Before you can design packaging you need to have a usable dieline and template. This episode explains how to easily create a packaging dieline without the need for expensive software. 

    It's so easy that you can actually create professional templates from your phone and have the files in seconds. 

    With over 700 packaging design templates, DiecutTemplates.com/UNBOXD offers you not only a fast way to create dielines but also a cheap way to do it. 

    So what are you waiting for? Go to DiecutTemplates.com/UNBOXD right now!

    Connect with Evelio on LinkedIn

    Download your own sustainable packaging guide here

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  • Packaging Designers looking for new materials are inundated with new technologies and materials with fantastic claims. But what happens to these materials when the infrastructure doesn't exist to process them and make those claims a reality? Find out how to consider the materials you choose and ask the questions that matter.

    Find out more about compostable plastics.

    Connect with Evelio on LinkedIn.

    Download the Free Sustainability Guide here.

  • Packaging Design is a key part of viral brands, brands that launch online with no brick and mortar and scale quickly due to demand, limited edition drops, and a great product. Last Crumb is just that brand!

    Last Crumb launched with beautiful product photography and an irreverent attitude, quickly selling out of their cookie drops weekly. Packaging is the only physical contact anyone will have with the brand besides the cookies, so the packaging has to be perfect.

    After unboxing the Last Crumb cookie packaging, I share what works what doesn't and how I would consider making edits.

    If you're a packaging designer and love cookies, you gotta listen.

    If you're a startup and want your packaging to build your brand beyond protecting your product, you need to listen.

    Connect with Evelio Mattos on LinkedIn to watch the actual unboxing, here.

    Interested in sustainable packaging design? Download this free sustainable packaging starter guide, here.

    Please rate, review, and follow.

  • How do you design packaging for end of life? You begin at the end and back into the design that delivers the most sustainable solution for each brand. Let's understand why Design Matters as well as why asking the right questions are as important as creating a clear sustainable packaging communication strategy is not just clever, but necessary.

    Packaging designer Evelio Mattos shares his experiences working with brands ranging from start-ups to global brands over 15 years, and how he continues to innovate and educate. 

    Connect with Evelio on LinkedIn

    Send questions or comments via our site.

    Download your own Sustainable Packaging Guide.

  • How do you select a packaging material for your packaging design? 

    You get the facts and ask questions.

    In this episode we discuss how certain materials may be recyclable in their country of origin but not necessarily recyclable in their country of deplyment. 

    Unknowingly selecting materials delivers packaging that is not desired by the local recycling centers and weakens the brand's sustainability story.

    If you want to learn more reach out to Evelio Mattos on LinkedIn

    Or download the Free Sustainable Packaging Guide Here

  • Our first listener question!!

    Ok, so how do you bring value to a brand when you sell packaging? Focus on the brand's biggest pain points not your packaging. How is their packaging being fulfilled? Is it an automated process, in-line, semi-automated, find out and understand that process to learn the fillers biggest pain points. Speak to the packaging distributor or the product distributor and find their biggest pain points!

    It's all about uncovering everyone's pain points at different phases of the supply chain, then determining the way you can solve the top three pain points. It may actually mean you sell less packaging sometimes, but that's a good partner. Focus on them first, and selling packaging second. 

    You'll develop a great relationship and reputation in the industry and soon your client list will grow beyond your own thoughts.

    Reach out to Evelio on linked to leave him a recorded question.

    Or leave a voice memo on the anchor website.

  • How do you compete on shelf? Follow the old saying, all is fair in love and war.

    On shelf competition is a war, it's a battle, and the unboxing process is a matter of making the consumer fall in love with the experience. 

    Packaging design without either of these fails on several key brand building moments, listen to how different brands approach this concept. 

    Apply these lessons to your packaging design process today!

    Follow Evelio Mattos on LinkedIn

    Download your free sustainability guide here.

    Rate and Review the Podcast please.

  • Developing Innovative Packaging concepts

    Limitless possibilities of kick-off Harsh realities of manufacturing Soul-crushing budgetary constraints Creativity sucking timelines Currently I’m early in the limitless possibilities stage of a project and wanted to talk about how I’m feeling because I can’t imagine I’m the only one that goes through these ups and downs.

    I love the project, one the brand, love how bluesky everything is at this stage.

    At this stage I can take the red pill or the blue pill:

    RED pill: I can design bluesky packaging that isn’t based in reality and takes into account manufacture, budgets, timelines and all of those parameters and deliver something the client will fall in love with instantly…

    Or the Blue Pill, I can design something that pushes the bounds of the parameters we’re locked into because of manufacturing, budgets, timelines and everything else that compresses your creativity.

    Here’s why I wanted to talk, because at this stage I don’t do either.

    I actually don’t do anything at all.

    I have ideas that roam between 1 and 2 running through my mind

    I see the potential and fall in love with an idea, but I also see the limitations which deflate the concepts

    But what I don’t do is I don’t begin to sketch or create anything tangible.

    WHY? Because I am afraid. I am so afraid that my concepts won’t work when I put them down on paper, I worry that I will sketch them out and see their flaws of how they won’t be able to be produced because of a particular fold, material, position, whatever.

    And this fear is paralyzing. I mean I can’t get myself to get started on paper.

    It’s a 48 hour process that I go through each and almost every time I work on a big project. Small ones no fear, big ones, lots of doubt.

    After 48 hours I make myself sit down and begin sketching out concepts whether it’s what I had in mind or some lateral idea that will get me to where I want to go.

    I have a conversation with myself about how these bluesy ideas will make the client love me and I settle on only delivering what is possible within the specified parameters. But ultimately I never take either the red pill or the blue pill. I take them both.

    I allow myself the freedom to sketch beyond the parameters but through the lens of what is possible. What can we push past, a concept that may take a little more budget, or take a little more time, something that may deliver an unexpected unboxing providing a moment of pause. Whatever the idea is it is always something that is possible, but not easy. It’s going to require the right partner or sets of partners to achieve.

    And when pitching these concepts to the client it’s important to explain where the difficulties lie. What concerns you, what creates the anxiety, and even explain the areas of your concept that you haven’t completely figured out.

    The point of this stage is to share ideas, be open, listen to feedback and realize the client doesn’t have to love your ideas. Concepts are a talking point to further the discussion to uncover what will deliver a memorable experience.

    If you’re not uncomfortable or a little fearful, you’r not doing it right. Stop playing it safe and share your fears with your client.

    If you’ve ever felt this way or have a different process for innovation let me know on linkedin or twitter. I’d love to hear from you.

    Connect with Evelio Mattos on Linkedin

    Download your Sustainable Packaging Guide

  • It's always packaging design awards season. Either you're entering The Dieline Wards or you're waiting to see who won. But how much does winning an award really matter to the longevity of your career? Will the title of "Award Winning Packaging Designer" get you the next big gig?

    Listen to what it means to win a packaging award and consider if you should enter the next one.

    Follow Evelio Mattos on LinkedIn

    Support our sponsor : Intl Direct Packaging

    If you do decide to enter a packaging competition I recommend starting with these 2:

    GDUSA

    Pentawards

  • A recent questions by listener Enrique F. asks:

    How do you always deliver innovative packaging designs and structural engineering? 

    The answer is, by doing more reps, building new designs, and copying other designs because the more you test out concepts the more you'll have in your idea bank. 

    Don't copy to duplicate, copy to learn and apply those learnings to your own designs and your own packaging design style.

    Ask your own packaging design question to Evelio by connecting with him on LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/EvelioMattos

    Support our sponsor IDPdirect.com by downloading their free sustainable packaging guide: https://bit.ly/IDPgreen

    Rate, Review, and Make Sure to Subscribe!

  • The idea that a brand trying to save money on packaging design is going to create a folding carton that consumers will actually use to decorate their home is ridiculous. Reusable packaging systems like Tom Szaky's Loop is different it actually gets reused. Creating packaging for CPGs that is a throwaway item and market it as reusable, is less helpful than clearly stating to the consumer how to properly recycle the packaging.

    Keep recycling easy, don't complicate it. It's complicated enough.

    Let me know what you think.

    Find Evelio Mattos on LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/EvelioMattos

    Support our sponsor IDPdirect.com
    Download their free sustainability guide: https://bit.ly/IDPgreen

  • Why do brands use plastic laminate over their papers when manufacturing their packaging? It's there to protect the print and integrity of the finish, but at what risk? The packaging becomes completely unrecyclable curbside unless it is separated into mixed or is incinerated, but it is not recyclied with paper of as plastic.

    Connect with Evelio on LinkedIn and DM him any questions you have regarding packaging:

    https://bit.ly/EvelioMattos

    Support our Sponsor IDPdirect.com and Download their Free Sustainable Packaging Guide:

    https://bit.ly/IDPgreen

  • How to set up packaging design files for production and packaging manufacturing.

    Create your dielines or open dxf dieline files in illustrator.

    Make sure your cut lines and score/crease lines are on separate layers and use different spot colors identified as cut and crease.

    Typically I will set up a green for folds and red for cut lines.

    To do this open your swatch pallet, create a new one, using CMYK adjust to the desired color, name it cut or fold, select spot color, and save it.

    Make sure to select spot color or else this will just piss off your production person, or you’ll end up with green and red lines all over the finished pack. Not good.

    Now that you have 2 layers 1 for cut and 1 for folds you need to create a layer for the artwork to be printed.

    Just 1 layer for printed artwork. Please don’t set up an illustrator file with 60 layers for print. It happens and it’s a disaster to try and unscrew files like that. Just don’t.

    This layer s for all of your images, text, barcodes, etc… Anything that is going to be printed. Since we print in CMYK, all artwork has to be in… you guessed it. CMYK. No RGB files.

    This can be easily checked in Illustrator to catch any errors before you send this out using the separations preview window in illustrator to click through each color. Also, don’t set up overprints unless you have some serious production experience. This is easily corrected by the production team, but it’s also easy to over look if you’ve overprinted art as they’ll assume you meant it.

    Why should you bother knowing how to set up a file for print if you’re a designer? Because you have to take control of your own work. Don’t assume someone else will take responsibility for your crappy files. They won’t.

  • Here's where you find packaging design inspiration. You look everywhere but packaging. Fashion, automotive design, architecture, culinary sciences, everywhere around you less packaging. The reason you shouldn't look to packaging for inspiration is that it helps you avoid looking derivitive and pushes you to be unique. Nobody else will have your perspective or ability to connect disparate objects in the same manner. Get out there and design packaging.
    _____

    Get factory-direct access to the only packaging factory trusted by luxury brands for their bags, boxes, and fabric packaging: IDPdirect.com

    Connect with Evelio Mattos on LinkedIn  - https://bit.ly/EvelioMattos

    Rate, Review, and Subscribe for more packaging tips.

  • How often do you consider the amount of plastic packaging in feminine hygiene products?

    Probably not often enough. 

    These products are packaged in tiny single serve plastics that are too small to be separated by curbside collectors. Size makes the plastic packaging and applicator less than desirable, so let's discuss what brands are out there designing sustainable tampon packaging. 

    Let's discuss the different brands tackling this issue and how they're designing sustainable tampon packaging today.

    Connect with Evelio on Linkedin: https://bit.ly/EvelioMattos

    Support our sponsor - Factory Direct Packaging Manufacturer of Sustainable Packaging: https://idpdirect.com

  • So, you’re fresh out of school or putting feelers out for a new gig?

    How do you get noticed?

    Whether you’re one of the 3 Million downloads my books have accumulated, seen my work on packaging websites, or caught my content online. There’s an old school way to get noticed. Keep your head down and crank out great work.

    Or the not so new way to get noticed. Get your work in front of eyeballs.

    Here’s how:

    1) Timing.

    What’s happening today or next week? Is there a movie being released, a fashion drop, some Pharma cold chain packaging getting press?

    Jump on it.

    When Tim Cook was on stage doing the first keynote for the Apple Watch my buddy John Turner and I saw an opportunity. We saw that you’d be needing to charge yet another apple product, so we thought why shouldn’t the packaging include a watch and phone charging station in the pack.

    Within 20 minutes we had rendered a full concept for the Apple Watch that took into consideration charging both your phone and watch.

    We gained a million views within 3 days and every blog picked it up from Mac Rumors to The Dieline.

    We had offers to buy the concept from tech brands, and consumers lining up for pre-orders.

    We got noticed in under a half hour.

    2) Fake it til you make it.

    You can generate buzz with fake packaging. Just like we did for the Apple Watch, the founders of Liquid Death Mountain Water built a business on a photoshopped can.

    They designed the concept, shared the image of the packaging because no point in showing the product - it’s just water.

    They ran some ads and got feedback that consumers were interested, not only that they got a ton of social impressions.

    After the photoshopped can, all they had to do was figure out how to build an entire business. The packaging was the easy part that got them noticed.

    3) Provide Value

    I released 2 books for Free, Packaging & Dielines 1 & 2. Shared the books on The Dieline, shared each page on Pinterest, and anywhere I knew they’d get seen by designers and start-ups looking for innovative packaging concepts they could make themselves.

    Several Years, and 3 Million downloads later - these books are used in nearly every design program and pages from the book flood Pinterest anytime you type in Packaging.

    Providing value means giving of yourself, you can do this by sharing packaging hacks you may have learned.

    You can share concepts that didn’t make the client cut, or sharing packaging that completely failed explain what you learned from it.

    If you want to get noticed, do good work. But make sure your name is tied to the work and shared with a purpose.

    As creatives we can feel like a slimy car salesman when we share our work. But don’t. If sharing work wasn’t part of the gig, you wouldn’t be familiar with the work of your favorite designers.

    Share it proudly.

    _________________________________

    Want to Get Noticed for Sustainable Packaging? Download the Sustainable Packaging Guide from IDPdirect.com

    Wanna Ask Questions? Connect with Evelio on LinkedIn - https://bit.ly/EvelioMattos

  • Should you label something recyclable just because it's technically recyclable? Creating a single polymer flexible film wrapper or flow-wrap that requires stpre drop-off isn't a solution based on current store drop-off rates. Making something recyclable isn't the challenge, but designing packaging with material that's desirable after recycling is. 

    Check out our sponsor IDPdirect.com if you're interested in working directly with the factory manufacturing your packaging without distributor mark-ups and convoluted supply-chains.

    Connect with Evelio on LinkedIn - https://bit.ly/EvelioMattos

  • Coke just released images of their new paper bottle and there is a ton of coverage without any asking is paper bottles are actually sustainable packaging? How you design packaging and minimize packaging waste isn't always about material selection, but about human behaviors.

    Let's discuss how Coke's packaging may work and how consumers may interact with it to dispose of it. 

    If you're considering sustainable packaging for your brand, contact our sponsor IDP Direct @ IDPdirect.com

    Unsure how to get started, check out their sustainable packaging guide which you can download for free here: https://bit.ly/IDPgreen

    Connect with Evelio on Linkedin https://bit.ly/EvelioMattos

  • Everyone is discussing sustainable packaging right now. Yet few know what sustainability means and even fewer understand circular systems. So how do you have a conversation with a client regarding sustainable packaging, you have to draw a line and decide whether you want to get paid or risk losing a client. But it's time to have a frank conversation. 

    Support our sponsor: IDPdirect.com the only factory direct packaging manufacturer trusted by luxury brands, and honestly one of the only ones I've worked with that know a thing or two about truly sustainable packaging. Check them out: https://www.IDPdirect.com

    Connect with me on LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/EvelioMattos