of stock-keeping units (SKUs).
Before implementing the Box on Demand
solution in the fall of 2013, the company
was using larger-than-needed boxes and
more protective dunnage than strictly necessary. Most of these boxes also exceeded
the dimensional weight minimums that
FedEx and UPS have recently imposed,
which would have significantly inflated
shipping costs under the current system.
But even before the carriers shifted to the
new pricing system, the system reduced
labor and shipping costs.
“We see two principal benefits,” says
Humble. “One is the cost. We are shipping
less air now and have reduced our dimen-
sional weight. The other is it supports our
customers’ efforts to be ‘green.’ We use less
dunnage and corrugated material, and now
we ship in the smallest carton we can use
without damage to the product.”
The Box on Demand system automati-
cally measures the items to pack and then
produces the optimally sized box within
about 10 seconds. Sheets of continuous
corrugated are fed into the Box on Demand
machine. The system then cuts and scores
the carton to the exact dimensions speci-
fied. At that point, the machine discharges
the flat carton, which is fed through a gluer
that folds and seals the tabs to create the
box. The worker tapes the carton bottom,
places the items inside, adds some pro-
tective material, and seals the top. A label
is printed and added before the carton is
conveyed to shipping. The system makes
about 450 boxes per day.
Since the new system was installed,
dimensional weight charges have dropped
by at least 66 percent and the company is
using less corrugated cardboard. Dunnage
costs have fallen by 30 percent without
any increase in damage. The new process
is speedier as well: The system has allowed
the company to keep up with a 9-percent
growth in volume over the past two years.
THERE’S A SCIENCE TO CHOOSing the right carton for a particular
product. And Carolina Biological
Supply can’t afford to leave anything to chance when it comes to
shipping delicate instruments and
laboratory equipment to classrooms
nationwide. To make sure it’s packaging those goods with scientific
precision, the company turned to a
new packaging solution from Box
on Demand.
Carolina Biological supplies
schools of all levels (elementary to
college) with a wide range of sci-
entific products—everything from
live fish and butterflies to chemi-
cals, laboratory beakers, and instru-
ments. “If you can imagine using it
in your science class, that is what we
sell,” says Jeff Humble, the suppli-
er’s logistics engineering manager.
The company uses four pack lines
for its orders. Three of the lines
handle the live products, specimens
for dissection, kits for experiments,
and the like. The Box on Demand
system is located on the fourth line,
which is devoted to instruments,
equipment, and supplies. This line
handles the majority of products
shipped and the most diverse array
a
p
p
l
ic
at
i
o
ns
Science equipment distributor installs a right-sized
packaging solution.
Packaging moves to the
head of the class