ITC chalks out strategy to scale up packaging business   - The Economic Times
  April 08, 2009
WITH   								packaging increasingly lending character and   								personality to a brand, ITC Ltd has chalked out   								a three-pronged strategy to scale up its   								packaging business. The company proposes to   								explore innovations and technologies to cater to   								the distinctive and innovative packaging   								requirements of the country's branded packaged   								foods and personal care segments.
As   								FMCG products get more and more branded and   								aspire to become a brand from a mere commodity,   								packaging will connote more than just a secure   								receptacle and convenient container. It will   								convey brand character, personality and contain   								a wealth of information about the brand, its   								size, contents and ingredients. It will also   								help differentiate a product from the others in   								the same category. Besides embracing foods,   								personal care items, matchboxes, agarbattis to   								lifestyle retailing products, packaging is   								significant even in case of consumer durable and   								mobile phone industries.
When   								contacted by ET, ITC Ltd's corporate management   								committee member R Srinivasan said: ''To cash in   								on the growing opportunity, ITC's packaging   								business has diversified into flexibles and   								backward integrated into the manufacture of LDPE   								(low density polyethylene), CPP (cast   								polypropylene) and extruded poly. The company is   								also investing in new lines for microfluting and   								shoulder boxes in a green factory run on   								renewable wind energy.''
At   								present, India's packaging industry across all   								materials is estimated at Rs 20,000 crore.
ITC's paperboards, speciality papers & packaging   								divisions, which collectively contribute about   								15% to its total turnover, have innovated   								packaging in several ways. At the paperboard   								stage, it is done through ECF pulping, ozone   								bleaching and sustainable forestry. At the   								printing stage, it is carried out with striking   								design combinations and decorative effects and   								at the packaging stage, the work is completed   								through innovative styles, formats, shapes,   								micro-flutes and shoulder boxes.
Elaborating, Mr Srinivasan said: ''Our divisions   								are constantly adopting new technologies.   								Investments in R&D at the plantations stage have   								reduced gestation to four years from seven   								years. This gestation is targeted to reduce   								further with some excellent scientists and   								agronomists at work.''
''Slow and steady movement to greater product   								awareness, branding and better retailing formats   								follows an evolution from 'loose' product sales   								to branded & packaged products with greater   								information to consumers about choices,   								ingredients and precautions. Customers today   								demand variety and change - sometimes desiring   								uniformity, sometimes dazzling variety,   								utilitarian, convenience, or even dual usage   								etc. All this drives changes in packaging,   								materials, colours, decorative effects, formats,   								shapes and sizes,'' he added.