Warehouse Club Pack Contract Packaging Capacity Increased at CVI
Country Valley Industries increases contract packaging capacity with new employees and equipment. www.cvipackaging.com
Johnson City, NY (PRWEB) June 22, 2005 -- Country Valley Industries, http://www.cvipackaging.com
one the country’s leading contract packaging and assembly services companies has
expanded its capacity to produce high volume warehouse club store packaging,
shrink wrapping, clamshell packaging and the packaging of multi-piece retail
products for both brick and mortar and online stores.
Food processors
and packaged goods manufacturers are required to multi-pack products for sale at
mega retailers and warehouse club stores such as Sam’s Club, Barnes & Noble,
BJ's, Target, Walmart, Amazon, and other retailers.
CVI’s experience in
packaging and its streamlined cost structure, enables them to assemble, pack,
shrink wrap, warehouse and distribute warehouse club packs and multi-pack
products to locations throughout the Northeast.
As the market for
assembly packaging increases, CVI announces the expansion of their co-packing
capacity with additional hand assembly and packaging lines that include 20 more
packers. This increased workforce enables them to meet existing contracts as
well as prepare for new sub-contract packaging work.
CVI has also added
another Shanklin shrink-wrap machine to its equipment inventory. This purchase
is representative of CVI’s commitment to expand and upgrade its packaging
facilities so that its customers can completely rely CVI for their outsourced
production needs.
Manufacturers also take advantage of CVI’s three
contract packaging and assembly facilities within a 30 mile radius in the
Greater Binghamton, New York area and at the crossroads of the Northeast, with
cost-effective distribution to over 90 million people within 350 miles.
In order to sell through the mega retailers and warehouse club stores,
packaged goods manufacturers are required to multi-pack their products for sale.
Whether its snack foods, breakfast bars, soap, canned goods or stationary the
requirement to sell in club stores is that products are typically shrink-wrapped
on a cardboard tray or in some type of multi-pack clamshell
packaging.
Often this method of packaging is outside of the scope of the
manufacturers existing packaging lines or it’s not cost effective to perform
these manual assembly procedures in-house. This is why food processors seek
outside expertise at co-packers or contract packaging companies. A co-packing
project may be short term, such as a special promotion or seasonal opportunity
to multi-package products for retail sale. Often packaging for warehouse club
packs is part of a long term sales requirement and in either case manufacturers
find they benefit from contracting for outside packaging services.
And
it’s why national brand manufacturers understand that CVI, “can do better…what
they’re better off outsourcing.” Please visit Country Valley Industries at: http://www.cvipackaging.com.
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Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/6/prweb253460.htm