Direct product decoration, a growth market for industrial inkjet

Direct product decoration is one potential new market that will be a feature at drupa next year for brand owners to explore new opportunities. The technology is still really in its infancy, which means it can be difficult to get right, but it also means that there are a very wide range of possibilities to produce something new, attractive and exciting, while potentially saving significant costs.

John Corrall_main

Guest article by John Corrall, Managing Director of Industrial Inkjet Ltd, which is also the official sales and technical support centre for the industrial division for Konica Minolta

Direct product decoration is one potential new market that will be a feature at drupa next year for brand owners to explore new opportunities. The technology is still really in its infancy, which means it can be difficult to get right and requires technical expertise that is still rare, but it also means that there are a very wide range of possibilities to produce something new, attractive and exciting, while potentially saving significant costs. It’s a game changer!

While inkjet is being used to add new features to products or packaging – right now high-build spot varnish seems to be very fashionable – the main request from the market is for very short runs or full personalization.

Of course personalization and customization do not require direct product decoration. A product can be personalized by adding a variable label or shrink-sleeve or even an in-mould label. One limitation of that route is obviously that the product isn’t really being customized at the last moment. The series of labels or sleeves must be printed first. So you couldn’t use that technique to make a one-off personalized smart-phone cover with a picture of your favorite kitten (and even if you did, would it be physically tough enough to withstand daily wear and tear?).

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But direct product decoration is also taking off where the run lengths might be thousands or tens of thousands, for example printing bottles, or tubes. Right now we are working on a large number of projects with some major industry players. Direct print of tubes seems to be the “next big thing”, but why is that? The simple answer is economics. No new technology ever takes off unless the economics works.

So what makes direct print more economic than the use of a label or sleeve? We realized what was happening about two or three years ago. To a tube manufacturer, the difference in cost between a digitally printed label and printing direct to the tube is not simply the cost of the label material. It’s actually the profit of the label convertor that makes the difference. The tube manufacturer buys his labels from an outside label print company. If he starts to print direct to the tube then this will be an in-house process. His cost now is only the ink used. Roughly speaking, we are seeing costs-per-print of between 10 and 30 % for direct print over digitally printed labels.

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In any application with very high volumes and no variation printing, digitally versus conventionally will end up more expensive. For every application we have to work out the break-even volume for the customer and make sure this makes sense to him. The good news is that with direct print the cost-per-print is much lower and so the break even volume becomes much higher. Inkjet stays economically viable into some serious run-lengths.

We’ve all seen what Coca-Cola did with printing individual names directly on bottles. And before that Stella McCartney offered perfume where every bottle was different, the image being printed by inkjet direct to the glass bottle. Although these examples are still unusual we already have one customer in a different market, who has fully adopted inkjet into their production. It’s an internet company where you can buy novelty goods, particularly mobile phone covers, and have your own photo or image printed directly on them. It’s hands-off production – no human intervention. Robots pick the part that’s printed by inkjet. This is a run-length of one item!

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There is a feeling in the “design” industry that the desire to buy expensive branded goods is fading. What comes next is personalization. So you don’t any more want a bag with “Gucci” on it – you’d probably prefer a bag with a picture of your kitten on it! Car number plates, sponges, perfume bottles, ear defenders and coffee cup sleeves are other examples of direct product decoration.

Here at IIJ we have visitors coming to us every day who have no experience of inkjet – but think it might be useful for their production process. It’s our job to find out if that is true for them. As well as the obvious print sample work (we produce over 300,000 £ worth of samples every year alone!), we spend a long time talking about how the inkjet system would need to fit into their production line. We talk about issues like pre-treatment of the material, ink adhesion, resolution and print quality as well as post-print curing of the ink. We provide complete solutions for the successful design and implementation of Konica Minolta’s industrial printheads which are renowned for high print quality and reliability.

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