“As a packaging designer, seeing the same rigid labels for every product frustrated me,” says Sarah Lim, Senior Designer at Pacific Packaging, a mid‑sized e‑commerce converter based in Singapore. “I wanted more flexibility, more creativity, but production constraints held us back.”
Pacific Packaging started ten years ago as a small family shop producing corrugated boxes. By 2022 they had grown into a full‑service e‑commerce packaging supplier handling more than 3,000 SKUs — from food containers to electronics boxes. Their label production, however, still relied on a mix of old flexo presses and manual die‑cutting. Sarah’s team could only use a handful of generic label designs, and every new client request meant a lengthy plate‑making process. “We were losing accounts because we couldn’t turn around a custom label in less than two weeks,” she recalls.
Company Overview and History
Pacific Packaging’s journey began in a 2,000‑sq‑ft facility with two‑color flexo presses. Over the years they expanded into digital printing for folding cartons, but labels remained an afterthought. “We treated labels as a necessary evil,” says James Wong, Production Director. “They were small, low‑value items — until e‑commerce exploded and clients started demanding personalized shipping labels for every order.”
By 2023 the company was producing 1.5 million labels per month, mostly on third‑party onlinelabels stock sheets that they manually overprinted. The inconsistency in adhesive quality and substrate thickness caused frequent jams on their automatic applicators. The team tried using avery labels template formats to standardize layouts, but the templates didn’t account for the slight dimensional variations of the label stock. “We were fighting the material every day,” James adds.
The turning point came when Sarah brought back a design concept from a packaging conference — variable‑data labels with spot‑UV finishes. “I showed it to James, and he said, ‘we can’t do that with our current setup, and even if we could, the cost would kill us.’ That’s when I started researching digital‑first label providers.”
Quality and Consistency Issues
The biggest headache was colour consistency. Pacific Packaging’s clients ranged from boutique tea brands to electronics retailers, each with their own brand colours. Using multiple ink batches and different substrate lots, the team struggled to keep ΔE below 4. “We’d have a beautiful run on Monday, then on Wednesday the same job would come out with a noticeable magenta shift,” Sarah explains.
Waste rates hovered around 8–9% — far above the industry average for label printing. Most of it came from setup waste and rejected rolls due to registration errors. The manual die‑cutting station added another 2% defect rate. “We were throwing away almost one out of every ten labels. That’s not just money — it’s lost trust with clients,” James says.
On top of that, the rigid flexo plates meant any design change required a $150‑$300 re‑plate fee. Sarah’s team would often postpone minor updates — like a seasonal icon or a promotional call‑to‑action — because the cost was unjustifiable for short runs. “We knew we were leaving money on the table, but the ROI of a new plate for a 200‑label order just wasn’t there,” she admits.
Technology Selection Rationale
After evaluating four digital label platforms, Pacific Packaging chose onlinelabels for its combination of substrate variety, colour management tools, and seamless template integration. Sarah’s design team could upload their existing avery labels template files and the system would automatically map them to the closest compatible label stock — including matte white, glossy, and clear polyester.
“One of the selling points was the onlinelabels promo code and discount structure for volume orders,” James notes. “We negotiated a tiered pricing model that dropped the per‑label cost by 35% once we hit 100,000 pieces per month. That made short‑run personalized labels economically viable.”
Implementation wasn’t seamless. The initial data pipeline from their ERP to onlinelabels’ platform had batch synchronization issues that caused delays of up to four hours. “For the first two weeks we were printing labels with wrong SKU numbers,” Sarah recalls with a wry smile. The onlinelabels support team worked closely with Pacific’s IT to build a real‑time API connection, which resolved the problem but added two weeks to the timeline.
Training the operators also took longer than expected. The flexo‑crew had years of muscle memory; switching to a digital‑first workflow meant learning new colour management software and understanding variable‑data rules. “I’ll be honest, there was resistance at first. Some guys thought their jobs were at risk,” James says. “But once they saw how quick the setup was — under five minutes versus 45 minutes on flexo — they started buying in.”
Quantitative Results and Metrics
Six months after full rollout, Pacific Packaging’s label waste dropped from 8‑9% to 2‑3% — saving roughly $18,000 per month in material and disposal costs. First‑pass yield for label jobs improved to 94%, and colour consistency across all runs held ΔE below 2.5. “We haven’t had a single colour complaint from clients since month three,” Sarah reports.
The biggest surprise was the boost in design output. With the ability to create unlimited variations without plate costs, Sarah’s team launched 47 new label designs in the first quarter — more than they had done in the previous two years combined. They also began offering seasonal and event‑specific shipping labels, which became a hit with e‑commerce clients. “One customer wrote us a thank‑you note saying our festive labels made their unboxing experience feel premium,” Sarah adds.
On the operational side, changeover time shrank from 45‑60 minutes to 3‑5 minutes per job, allowing Pacific Packaging to run 12–15 label jobs per shift instead of 4–5. Throughput increased by roughly 30%, and the department now handles 2.2 million labels per month with the same headcount. James sums it up: “We were skeptical about doing labels digitally — I thought it was a fad. But the numbers don’t lie. And our designers are happier, our clients are happier, and our bottom line is healthier.”