Portland Pet Food Company now uses shelf-stable sustainable packaging for its dog food. The recyclable stand-up pouch is BPA-free.
According to the company, Portland Pet Food Company packaging features include:
Founder Kate McCarron was inspired to start making her own natural, healthy dog meals when Rosie, her 14-year-old standard poodle, no longer showed interest in kibble and began to lose weight. McCarron created fresh meals using seasonal produce to entice Rosie to eat more, which led to the creation of Portland Pet Food Company.
Portland Pet Food Company products are made in USDA-approved commercial facilities.
Nearly ten years ago, Petfood Industry presented trends in pet food packaging coming out of Expozoo 2007 in Paris. Many of those trends are similar to those of today.
In 2007, pet food packaging already was starting to focus heavily on informative messages on the containers, a main focus of pet food packaging now too. Icons and graphics made those messages easy to understand. A critical function of those icons is to quickly convey the benefit to the pet from that product.
Consumers, then as now, wanted to know about the health aspects of their pet foods. In 2007, a limited range of pet foods were labeled as hypoallergenic for dogs and cats, such as the Italian brand Forza 10. That pet food proclaimed the ingredients it didn’t contain, a technique in pet food marketing known as a negative labeling.
A decade ago, paper packaging faced stiff competition from plastic. However, one aspect of paper was growing in popularity then, and is now a mainstream force in marketing. Environmental sustainability was a selling point for paper in 2007. Fast-forward to pet food packaging trends of 2016, when eco-conscious consumers have become major forces in the pet food market, and paper containers have benefitted.
Some trends that were just dawning in 2007 have become mainstream now. Plastic zippered paper bags were a hot new trend back then. Now, a major trend is the use of flat-bottomed bags, which allow efficient storage and offer a large printable surface.
Tim Wall covers the dog, cat and other pet food industries as a senior reporter for WATT Global Media. His work has appeared in Scientific American, Live Science, Discovery News, Honduras Weekly, Global Journalist and other outlets. He holds an M.A. in journalism and an M.S. in natural resources, both from the University of Missouri - Columbia, along with a bachelor's degree in biology.
Wall served in the Peace Corps in Honduras from 2005 to 2007, where he coordinated with the town government of Moroceli to organize a municipal trash collection system, taught environmental science, translated for medical brigades and facilitated sustainable agriculture, along with other projects.
Contact Wall via https://www.wattglobalmedia.com/contact-us/
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