A lot of packaging conversations still begin at the material level: weight, format, recyclability. Necessary, but not sufficient. What’s accelerating now is a second layer, driven by regulation: data. What you disclose about packaging, where that information lives, and whether it can be relied on by retailers, regulators, and increasingly, machines.
That’s why connected packaging is no longer “engagement tech.” It’s product data as infrastructure. This edition looks at how that shift can be used to your advantage.
Compliance becomes expensive when data is fragmented
The real cost in packaging regulation isn’t complexity. It’s duplication: the same attribute defined in multiple ways, a claim updated in one market but not another, a QR destination that is out of sync with the pack, a supplier file that doesn’t align with the consumer-facing disclosure. Each of these gaps introduces risk, rework, and loss of control.
Accessibility is the litmus test for information quality
If the customer-facing journey is accessible, the information structure is usually good enough to be governed: clear hierarchy, consistent labels, readable formatting, predictable navigation. That structure is also what makes product data trustworthy, and trusted product data is the prerequisite for DPP and any AI models that will interpret your disclosures.
What “packaging information architecture” looks like in practice
Three moves that reduce chaos fast:
1) Decide your canonical packaging dataset (pack composition, recyclability instructions, local variants) and lock it as the source, structured to GS1 standards so the data is readable across consumers, retailers, regulators, and machines.
2) Create “disclosure views”. One view for consumers, one for regulators, one for internal use. Same underlying data, different presentation rules.
3) Instrument the loop. Track where information gets used: scan journeys, retailer feeds, customer queries, so you can prove value and identify inconsistencies or outdated data early.
The context regulators are responding to
Eurostat reports 79.7 million tonnes of packaging waste were generated in the EU in 2023, 177.8 kg per inhabitant. Against that backdrop, it’s predictable that regulators will want clearer rules, clearer disclosures, and fewer greenwashing claims.
The brands that handle packaging information like an operational system, not a collection of PDFs, will move faster and spend less.
Closing Thoughts
Compliance creates advantage when it improves the quality of your data, the scalability of your packaging programmes, and the reliability of your customer-facing information.
If you’re working through these challenges, we can help bring clarity and structure to your approach. Email us at [email protected]