96

BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Presentation by John Fagan of BIM as part of Enterprising Donegal Business Week 2013

Citation preview

Page 2: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Tech-transfer

Page 3: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Researching Innovative technologies for industry

Page 4: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Kinds of queries we deal with…“I have the raw material – what will I make”?

“I found this French product, can I make something similar”?

“Where can I source these trays/film”?

“How do I package it”?

“I’m only getting 6 days shelf-life, I want 12…21...”

“What kind of packaging equipment will I buy”?

“I've already bought a packaging machine – do you think its suitable”?!

Page 5: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

We deal with numerous Irish and International packaging companies

Equipment suppliersTraysFilmBottlesCansPouchBag etc

Page 6: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

We deal with numerous National and International packaging suppliers

Page 7: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

We deal with numerous National and International equipment suppliers

Page 8: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Numerous ingredients companies..

Page 9: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Numerous other processing equipment suppliers

Page 10: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

To date….Over 300 company NPD projectsRanging from small to largeRaw, chill, frozen, pasteurised, freeze-chill

etc.Consumer foods, baby foods, pet-foodsDairy, beverage, meat/muscle foods,

cereals etc. No “One-fits-all approach”Each situation is different

Page 11: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Every company is differentSize of operationStages of growthBudget available for CapexRequired shelf-lifeTarget marketMarket size/volume Level of automation requiredExpertise/skillsProvenanceUse of ancillary

equipment/processesEtc

Page 12: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

The most successful NPD ideas are market-led.

Packaging represents most queries to date.

However one common factor…

Page 13: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Important to have a starting point for NPD process

Varied nature of queriesNot all complete A-Z projects (farm to fork /

boat to throatDifferent competencies of

companies/individualsDifferent requirementsNeed to have a formal approach to dealing

with client queries

Page 14: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Develop our own model building on tried-and-tested methodologies

1. Marketing Input 2. Concept Research 3. Proposed ingredients

and raw material source 4. Initial first product

make up 5. Recipe Formulation 6. Sensory Evaluation 7. Process technology 8. Work up costings

9. Shelf life and nutritional testing

10. Customer Presentation

11. Product sign off with customer

12. Photography and pack design

13. Confirm packaging 14. Pre production trials 15. Launch

Ref: Leatherhead UK

Exhaustive process – stage gates at each stage to allow project to proceed/kill to next step

Page 15: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Client comes in to discuss numerous

ideas with team

Company capabilities/strengths/equipment etc. versus

competitor

Market-specific spot check to look

at opportunity

If business-case proceed to project

design (if not kill/adjust)

Project design/timelines/respo

nsibilities/stage gates/deliverables

Working prototype

Tweak/adjust prototype based

on buyers requirements'

Capex/equipment/

outsourcing etc

Launch and monitor

Page 16: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

All NPD should be market-led

“one-in-ten products are successful”

“”a new product can take 18-months to get to market”

Page 17: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Importance of market research First step on the NPD processIs there a gap / demand for your product? Market research is essential & time well

spent. Benchmark your concept against competitor

offeringsSee what multiples require in terms of pack

size/price-point etc Opportunity to determine what your

competitors are using and try to improve upon this

Page 18: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Store checks- quick and convenient

Page 19: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Gastropub: Main For Two€10.49 per 720g

Count on us: Low Fat Range€5.99 per 400g

Haddock Cumberland Pie€3.39 per 300g

Ensuring competitor USP’s are improved upon

Store checks allow you to buy and reverse-engineer successful products

Page 20: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Additional sources of data e.g. Mintel/Kantar

Bord Bia

Page 21: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Recipe formulation/reverse engineering (Mintel)

Tesco Thai Crab Fish CakesCompany: Subcategory:Date Published: ID:1592970Tesco Fish Products12 Jul 2011Tesco Thai Crab Fish Cakes contain Alaska pollack and sweetchilli melt in the middle. The fish cakes are free from artificialpreservatives, flavours and colours. This product retails in a290g recyclable pack containing two pieces.Country:IrelandStorage Type:FrozenIngredients: Crab meat (21%) (white crab meat (70%), brown crab meat (30%)), Alaska pollack (15%), wheat flour,sweet chilli sauce (12%) (water, red pepper, sugar, fructose, tomato, vinegar, cornflour, fish Nutrition: Per 100g: Energy 770kJ/185kcal, Protein 10.2g, Carbohydrate 18.1g (of which Sugars 4.7g), Fat 7.8g

Page 22: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

E.g. Mintel data

Page 23: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Market-data can help you decide which strategy to go with

Branded v’s own brand ?

Page 24: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

(Does the retailer have room for another fish chowder?!)

Page 25: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Packaging has important role to playIn getting your product and brand noticedCan be retailer-push towards packaging

formats e.g. MAP versus Skin-packAlso importantly, packaging must deliver

optimal product quality over duration of shelf-life (food contact packaging)

Important to screen competitor offerings

Page 26: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Remember we are still in the initial stages of the project and are defining how market

requirements'

1.Marketing Input 2.Concept Research 3.Proposed

ingredients and raw material source

4.Initial first product make up

5.Recipe Formulation 6.Sensory Evaluation 7.Process technology 8.Work up costings

9. Shelf life and nutritional testing

10. Customer Presentation

11. Product sign off with customer

12. Photography and pack design

13. Confirm packaging 14. Pre production

trials 15. Launch

Page 27: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

From the food scientific perspective….

Try to identify packaging materials/technologies early-on

Packaging materials and equipment must deliver maximum quality throughout the

shelf-life

Prototype development must ensure commercial scalability

Initial first product make-up….

Page 28: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Physical functions of packaging

SPOILAGE

Oxidation

Moisture/Aw ChemicalSensory

Colour

OdourTexture

Microbial

Page 29: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Spoilage organisms – Fresh meatE.g. Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter,

Moraxella,Shewanella, Alcaligenes, Aeromonas, Escherichia, Enterobacter, Serratia,

Hafnia,Proteus, Brochothrix, Micrococcus, Enterococcus, Lactobacillus, Leuconostoc,

Carnobacterium and Clostridium. The predominant spoilage flora in a meat is

determined by nutrient availability, oxygen availability, storage temperature, pH, storage time of the product, and generation time of the

micro organisms present in a given environment

Page 30: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Bacterial spoilage beer

For brewing industry, beer spoilage bacteria have been problematic for centuries. They include some lactic acid bacteria such as Lactobacillus brevis,

Lactobacillus lindneri and Pediococcus damnosus, and some Gram-negative bacteria such as Pectinatus

cerevisiiphilus, Pectinatus frisingensis and Megasphaera cerevisiae. They can spoil beer by

turbidity, acidity and the production of unfavorable smell such as diacetyl or hydrogen sulfide

Page 31: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Yeasts and moulds Yeasts and Moulds are major spoilage

organisms predominately in low water activity foods (e.g. jams,

syrups, dried foods) and foods with low pH (e.g. 3.8 pickles/marinades). In general, Yeasts will grow in the

presence or absence or oxygen while moulds are generally inhibited by

oxygen-free environments. However “oxygen-Free” status is dependent on

effectiveness and integrity of packaging medium

Page 32: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Packaging….Is only one Hurdle used

in conjunction with others.

Temperature (heat and/or cold-chain)

pH/AwAir/Modified AtmosphereHeat treatmentsIngredients/additivesPackaging maintains

inhospitable environment to spoilage bacteria

Page 33: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Packaging has numerous functionsPhysical protectionBarrier protection – air/water

etcAvoid Cross

contamination/securityFacilitate TransportRetard spoilage (NB ***)As a processing step e.g. can/jarMarketing toolConvenience e.g.

microwave/oven

Page 34: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

When developing a new productImportant to use commercially-available

packaging equipment and materials early-on in trials

Ensures commercial simulation of the cold-chainTest seal integrity and associated properties of

productAllows natural spoilage to occur as per

commercial cold-chain/logisticsGenerates usable microbiological data for

development of HACCP/FSMSUse accredited micro-testing when possible

Page 35: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Many packaging suppliersUnderstand incremental growthNumerous entry-level solutions to help you to

get up and runningEntry-level equipmentHire of larger equipmentSmall print runsAllows you to test concept at prototype stage

before large investment

Page 36: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

IngredientsTrend towards clean-label ingredientsRetailers have list of preferred suppliersRetailers have list of ingredients they do not

want in productsChoice of ingredients may be dictated by

price-points and target marketE.g. M&S UK v’s ChinaImportant to screen ingredients suppliers in

terms of BRC, quality systems etc

Page 37: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

IngredientsTrend towards clean-label ingredientsRetailers have list of preferred suppliersRetailers have list of ingredients they do not want

in productsChoice of ingredients may be dictated by price-

points and target marketE.g. M&S UK v’s ChinaImportant to screen ingredients suppliers in

terms of BRC, quality systems etc“fresh ingredients” may require more expensive

processing technologies to deliver shelf-life Dried ingredients can often make more financial

sense

Page 38: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Raw Pre-pack + IngredientsSauces/spices/

glazes etcSavoury crumbButters/toppingsIncreased

convenienceBacteriologicalAnti-oxidant affect

Page 39: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Ingredients work well with raw seafood

Chilled shelf-life (+ gas) <10 days

Frozen raw shelf-life < 1 year

Page 40: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Raw Pre-pack +Ingredients…Add flavourMask odours Increase convenienceRosemary can reduce

microbiological growthLemon/lime/citric can reduce

oxidationHowever must source from

reputable supplierSpices can be loaded with

bugs!!!Wash vegetables well!!Early identification of

ingredients will ensure usable results e.g. shelf-life trials/nutritional

Page 41: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Develop our own model building on tried-and-tested methodologies

1.Marketing Input 2.Concept Research 3.Proposed

ingredients and raw material source

4.Initial first product make up

5.Recipe Formulation 6.Sensory Evaluation 7.Process technology 8.Work up costings

9. Shelf life and nutritional testing

10. Customer Presentation

11. Product sign off with customer

12. Photography and pack design

13. Confirm packaging 14. Pre production

trials 15. Launch

Page 42: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Product sign-off with customerProject so far has identified correct look

and feel of productInitial shelf-life determinationCalculation of associated costs (materials,

equipment, labour, over heads etc)Sensory trials to identify consumer

feedback and adjust/incorporate as suggested

Product specs maximised before approaching buyer

Understanding of all associated costs Finalise branding/pack design/labelling etc

Page 43: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Photography and pack design

Page 44: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Both commodity and own-brand can make money

Page 45: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Develop our own model building on tried-and-tested methodologies

1.Marketing Input 2.Concept Research 3.Proposed

ingredients and raw material source

4.Initial first product make up

5.Recipe Formulation 6.Sensory Evaluation 7.Process technology 8.Work up costings

9. Shelf life and nutritional testing

10. Customer Presentation

11. Product sign off with customer

12. Photography and pack design

13. Confirm packaging 14. Pre production

trials 15. Launch

Page 46: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Case study 1.

Artisan seafood producer who wanted to produce ready meal products with

min 21 days shelf-life

Small company with €30k to spend on equipment (combi-ovens)

Page 47: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Product LimitationsHe tried Gas flushing but not effective

due to physical nature of productCompany using combi-oven to cook

fish, sauce, potato etcFollowed by cold assemblyMicro Log 7 after 8 days.Too short to access UK market (and

beyond)Plans to distribute throughout EU and

needs 21+ days

Page 48: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Choice of tray

Page 49: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Competitor offerings identified during store check

Foil D2/Topfilm

C-pet D2/Topfilm

Foil + waxed card

M&S

Page 50: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Early screening suggestedFoil oven tray (12c)40-60mm deep trayD2/group 6 footprint

(200x155)Dual oven/microwavableRecyclable200-350g portion size (adult

serving)Cardboard sleeve (22c – 5

colours)

Page 51: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Ingredients considerationsStore-checks suggested mixture of clean-

label and not-so-clean on marketAs chowder product, fish stock crucial

componentCompany did not want to make own stockChose foodservice (dry) product with

reasonably clean ingredients deckDecided to use frozen fish cubes and par-

cooked veg

Page 52: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Equipment trialledIlpraMultivacPromensHired for 1

month each€750-1200/

monthD2 footprint8-12

trays/min

€27-30k

Page 53: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Practical considerationsCold-fill delivered 8 days shelf-life

To achieve 8+ days, necessary to pasteurise

in-tray (e.g. 85 deg C for 30 min chamber

temp)

Therefore Polypropylene (PP) or High

Density Polyethylene (HDPE) material

required (C-pet/foil misshapen after cook)

Possible suppliers e.g. Promens or Mecapack

RH Packaging V511 machine

Page 54: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Deciding factors…MAP not suitable for this application as

cooking step (process)Polypropylene tray chosen as with-stands high

temperaturesAntifog top film to increase visibilityThroughput (Promens 511) 6-8 trays per minCost 12-15c each + 5 c top web + 12c

cardboard sleeve (volume dependant)Machine - €27kFinal product microwavable but not oven-able

(but working on this)

Page 55: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Other product produced with similar packaging technologies

Page 56: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Case study 2

Smoked meats manufacturer considering upgrading packaging

€30k spend on equipment.

Page 57: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Artisan salami and cooked meats

Page 58: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Issues with current packaging rangeCompetitor offerings more visually

appealingManual filling/vacuum packingHandling time and cross contaminationManual packaging bottleneckInconsistent look to product rangeNo shelf-ready packaging therefore poor

product placement on shelves (Plan-o-gram)

Difficult to Brand current pack

Page 59: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Competitor Packaging Equipment - Thermoforming

ILPRA

Multivac

Ulma

Optional gas-flush application

Forms its own trays

High volume throughput

Costs €75k-220K

Page 60: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Solutions testedPrinted pouch – Alert Packaging and Fosters Packaging

Multivac T250 – Tray and skinpack

Mecapack S1000 Skin packer

Trays and film supplied by Versatile packaging, Monaghan

Group 4 PP with skin-pack top film

Page 61: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Printed PouchBetter visual impact /

brandingStill issue of manual

fillingOption to develop similar

style pack on flow-wrapper

But flow-wrap = 75k (“not a runner”)

Buyer liked the new packaging but manual packaging too expensive

Page 62: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Multivac T250Dual tray sealing and skin-pack (in

tray)D2 x 4 trays (200x155) (PP)20mm deep tray skin-pack (in-tray)Option to gas flush salamis/smoked

chorizo in tray (50mm deep) on same machine

Cost per tray 12c + 5c top-filmTray material – optional as

reheat/oven/microwave not required (PP chosen)

Optional printed top-filmMachine €35kThroughput – 4 up die set (4 trays per

cycle) – 12 trays per min skinpack/8 per min gas flush (product dependent)

Page 63: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Mecapack S1000Polypropylene 20mm

traySkin-pack top-film4-6 trays per minS1000 heads fit large

machines (trade-up possibility)

Same supplier manufacturers PP trays

Cost trays 18-25c (per 5000)/topfilm 6-8c)

Page 64: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Deciding factorsOne stop shop for machine + film

(Mecapack)Possibility to trade-up and save money on

sealing heads/die setClient also sourced wrap around

cardboard sleeve from Dollard Packaging (12c each)

Shelf-life extended by 1 week due to removal of cross contamination issue (manual packaging – Entero)

Rent-to-buy option with this companyWill probably scale up to a Multivac

Thermoformer in near future (greater efficiencies)

Page 65: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

These packaging technologies can also be used for

Page 66: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Case Study 3Nut and cereal based snack bar. 6

bars per box (printed carton).

Page 67: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Competitor offerings

Page 68: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Packaging used by competitors

Large Flow wrappers €75-200k

Page 69: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

www.alertpackaging.com

Important when dealing with film manufacturers

• The size and weight of the bar • Product, Positioning, Price (Premium vs “cheap-as-chips”)• Reverse engineer (copy!) competitor product packaging or bespoke• Shelf-life required (this will dictate barrier properties e.g. laminate

of barrier Polypropylene)• Throughput per hour• Laminates trap ink and avoids scuffing• On what type of machine will you pack . (DIY vs. OUTSOURCE)• Packaging machine dimensions• What kind of work have they done before?• Min print runs (e.g. 5000 linear metres entry level)• Costs per additional colour (gold & metallic ink expensive)• Can they do artwork or bring myself?• Finalise material specs and document (important is unexpected

change in product down the line)• Check supplier ISO, BRC, Repack accreditations (important for

selling to multiples)

In terms of packaging materials…

Page 70: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Paddy’s O’ Granola Range

75% common colours throughout with distinct

colouring to indicate variations in range

White background and “Paddy O’s” common

Page 71: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Trialled during this project

+

Flowrap one (Basic packaging Ltd, UK)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&NR=1&v=bvwHBlMxUlE

Page 72: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Machine & material sourcingFlow-wrapBasic Packaging Ltd. (£9995 entry)(Also supply VFFS for Crisps)(£7995 entry)Print Registration Unit (PRU)Acrylic coated outer layerPolypropylene inner layerBarrier film inner layerGas-flushed with nitrogen (to eliminate air)Rental option – rented for 3 months with rental cost deducted from final priceThroughout 20 packs per minOptional extension on carousel line

Page 73: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Final product important factsWater activity (Aw) control crucialProduct discoloured with lightFoil layer used to omit lightClient had 3 products5000 linear metres film best utilised with common colour sourceSpot colouring to show variations in product/ingredientsClient explored Paper : PP material for artisan feel. Client also needed to source a printer for BB date etc.

Page 74: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

ANSER U2 PRINTERS

• 300 DPI Printing• Dates, times, counters and logos• Handy remote control• Available as network version• Clean, no mess• Up to 5 lines of text• Prices from €1,650.00• Also see CODICO (Ire)

Page 75: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Want to know moreabout flow-wrapping??Good site re Flow wrapping and material;

http://www.boschpackaging.com/doboy/eng/pdf/Bosch_Guide-to-Flow-Wrapping.pdf

But always consult your materials supplier who will discuss cost and shelf-life implications and different materials

Page 76: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Flow wrapping has application for

Page 77: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Case Study 4Chowder producer looking for longer

shelf-life

(currently 14 days).

Monies available – €20k “at a push”!!

“But I’m not buying new”

Page 78: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Current processBrat pan Brought to boil and fish added

for last 20 minLadled and hot-filled into tamper-

evident tubsBlast chilledSticker/label applied by handPlaced into outer cardboard box12 in outer cardboard box (2 x 6

per layer)

Page 79: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Competitor technologyLimitech mixer/heatingAutomatic dosing into tubsMondini tray sealer with de-

nesterPasteurised in steriflow retortShelf-life 1year (ambient)

(minimum)Printed tubsTraceability systemAlready paid for factory &

equipmentLarge workforce

Page 80: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

First of all…..REALITY CHECK !!!High volume competitor productNot main product (ready meals)Major supplier to Tesco (UK)Use of additives and thickenersContrary to brand values of our clientCapex investment €2million ++Go back and start your market check againCompare yourself to more realistic

competitor

Page 81: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Benchmark against similar productsRange of product with 3 months max

shelf-lifeSmall volumesArtisan values, provenance, freshness

etcStart small e.g. local SupervaluFocus on freshness, quality and “local”Improve upon competitor productsAllow for growth

Page 82: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Packaging trialled

Hand sealer with profile cut (4 up die set – circular tubs) x 2

HDPE tubs (150ml)

Wrap around cardboard sleeve (Dollard packaging)

Second-hand Semi-automated depositor (Riggs autopack, UK)

Riggs autopack

€1100

€12k

Page 83: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Value for money??Pro’s16 trays per minSemi-automated dosing into HDPE tubsOption to use printed top-film and eliminate

cardboard sleeveDosing machine reduced handling/cross

contamination

Con’sStill a manual operationAdditional investment required for scale-up Longer shelf-life requires further heat-

treatment in-pack

Page 84: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

However….This client needed to produce min 3000 units per week to

supply retailerCapex would have been too small

Decided to OUTSOURCE (in short-term)Pros Large-volume possibleCan focus on salesYou know your capacity Slightly more expensive€1.12/pack)HACCP/FSMS/BRC etc responsibility of another companyConsDifferent factory number (FR)Tied in to 6-12 month contractEventually outsourcer might take business

Page 85: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Outsourcing production Outsourced to ready meals company Did not want to fillet/skin/bone Additional costs for outsourcing filleting etc

Outsourcing company wanted to use commercially-available ingredients

E.g. dried spices, UHT cream, Kibbled onions etc

Balance had to be struck between original product and outsourced

Outsourced more realistic in terms of price-points However fresh herbs, cream etc were not allowed in

factory

Work in progress…

Page 86: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Important when outsourcing… Pre-meeting Confidentiality agreement Bring prototypes/competitor products Go armed with market data re price-points Research outsourcing company product portfolio ID positive and negative attributes

Meeting Taste your prototype Discuss ingredients/shelf-life Understand their capabilities/capacity Discuss packaging requirements Especially min runs (product, process, packaging) Ask for contact point on factory floor re product spec/prototype

dev Agree project plan (Slide 11)

Follow-up Finalise product spec/ingredients Check/review regularly

“Remember your brand can be affected by quality

issues related to outsourcing”

Page 87: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Case Study 5

Large seafood processor wanted to test Thermoforming/skin-packaging

Equipment trials & costs analysis/throughput

Page 88: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Skin-pack/Thermoform Equipment – Raw Pre-pack (Trialled 4 machines)

€28k €120k++

Page 89: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Focus group and buyer feedback re skin-pack

Increased visual specLess plastic/packagingMore in box/palletIncreased logistics (cheaper transport)Tactile – can see underneath of productRetailer wanted this in fish sectionCompany had to be prepared to do 2 for 1’s three times a year

Page 90: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Client gathered quotes for equipment

Multivac R095 Flex R105 Semi rigid (MAP+ skin) R125/145 Cooked meats R175 DARFRESH R275 Darfresh MAP + SKIN DARFRESH 45mm above tray + 50mm deep

ULMA TFS 300 TFS 500 TFS 700 Mondini TRAVE 590 E340 All MAP and skin-pack 100-200k

Client also visited other machine demo

facilities

Page 91: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

We carried out trials re materials/usage/costs with film manufacturers

Topweb TC201 650m long = 2400 trays/roll

Bottom web EGEV 200m long = 740

trays/roll

Cryovac, alert packaging etc supplying materials to Irish companies

Page 92: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Calculating costsThroughput per hourDictated by machine sizeE.g. 420mm carouselE.g. 3 x 127 x 270mm packs (381mm)Rest of film excess/wasteApprox cost 11-15c per packPlus cardboard sleeve 22c/packPrinted top-web – 18-22c per packPotential savings

Page 93: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Shelf-life analysisDarfresh material versus barrierGas flush = 6 daysVaccum = 6 daysDarfresh = 8 daysSensory/odour/chemcial/microbiological

analysisSet up sampling plansLabelling requirementsIn-factory prototype developmentActing in neutral capacity for SME’s

Page 94: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Thermoforming has application for

Page 95: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

So when developing new products Identify markets and competitor offerings

Identify RTM strategy and buyer requirements'

Narrow down packaging formats based on competitor offerings/new

technologies

Link with agencies to define how product is produced (upstream and

downstream)

Hire/trial equipment on site/incubation unit

Preliminary sensory trials before expensive micro trials

Ensure micro carried out using commercial conditions (simulate cold-chain)

Teagasc/BIM/Bord Bia/EI/Universities etc can give neutral advice re equipment

suitability/selection

Work on developing innovative culture in your company and don’t be afraid to

try new technologies

Page 96: BIM Presentation J Fagan Food Product Development

Thank you

John Fagan

087 9045047