Recently I completed a Lego survey on their packaging (available here - http://brickingaround.com/2017/02/18/lego-is-after-your-opinion-on-packaging/#more-16405 - open to 6 March if you're interested in partaking).
The survey covers the gamut of packaging questions from quality, to the importance of design to the outer packing materials used by Lego online to ship their products (which is currently abysmal). The survey prompted me to question how important is packaging.
The answer for me is very important. Packaging represents a moment in time, a moment that can only exist once when the item is pristine, holding the hearts desire inside and waiting to be opened. Once opened you cannot get that moment back, it's gone, the item's open, which is a whole new adventure.
I have always loved packaging. Now don't think me vain as the inside counts as well but I just believe that packaging adds to the experience. If we eat with our eyes, don't we also experience with our eyes. There is something about an item that is well packaged; to me it shows the love, care and respect that has gone into the item. It creates a sense of quality and can generate excitement.
Now, Lego is a contradiction in terms. It creates an interlocking brick system that has barely hundredths of millimetres of difference between each brick but their packaging is lack lustre and often weak. It also seems unfit for purpose; too big, so few boxes are the same size, they aren't resealable. Also, Lego has thin paper manuals, which are fine for cheaper sets, and sometimes include sticker sheets but these are left to rattle around inside a box with plastic bags and often get crumpled or folded or bent. There has to be a better way!
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How else would you package a waffle cone? |
One of my favourite countries is Japan and perhaps Denmark could learn from them about packaging. Here is a country that understands the importance of packaging that is fit for purpose; maximising function and form. Sometimes the packaging in Japan is so right for the item that you almost miss the ingeniousness of it but if you take a second to notice, for me at least, it always produces a smile.
I would love to hear your thoughts about packaging - is it important to you, do you think Lego did it better in the 80's and 90's, is there a better way to package? I don't have a lot of answers other than I think there is a better way (probably start with smaller boxes with standard sizing), put manuals in a compartment inside the the box, pay the extra for durability and the list goes on.
Yours in brick
C