
The most expensive packaging mistake isn’t a bad design. It’s a scared decision. I work with founders whose packaging is costing them sales without them even knowing it.

I was working with a founder recently. Great product. Genuinely funny name. A clear customer who needed exactly what she was making. We built a strategy around standing out. No product shot on the front. Everyone does that. We’d lead with personality instead.
Multiple rounds. Real thinking. A brand with actual nerve.
And then she went quiet.
A few days later: “Can we just try it with the product on the front?”
I felt my eye twitch. (Professionally. Barely noticeably. Probably.)
She wasn’t being difficult. She was about to spend real money on packaging that had to work. And I was asking her to do something none of her competitors were doing. Of course she wanted the safety net. Being right wasn’t enough. She needed evidence, not my conviction.
The Real Problem With Packaging Decisions
Founders under pressure don’t default to bold. They default to familiar. Familiar feels safe. Safe looks like everyone else on shelf. And everyone else on shelf doesn’t stand out.
The decision isn’t just visual. It’s emotional. And when it’s emotional, founders need evidence, not opinions.
Here’s the math that makes this real. The average premium CPG founder is sitting on 500 to 2,000 units that aren’t moving the way they expected. At $10 to $20 margin per unit that’s anywhere from $5,000 to $40,000 of stuck capital. Then they blame the ads. Drop the price. Order another run with the same packaging.
The Signals Customers Read Without Knowing It
Customers don’t analyse your packaging consciously. They feel it. A box that feels light signals lower value. A label that’s hard to read in three seconds gets skipped. A colour palette that matches every other brand in the category creates zero reason to stop.
The signals that quietly hurt sales are usually:
- Hierarchy that buries the benefit below the fold line
- Board weight or material that undermines the price point
- A logo that doesn’t scale or reproduce clearly at small sizes
- Colour that blends into the category instead of standing apart
- Claims that are technically accurate but emotionally flat
- Structural issues that create friction at the moment of use
None of these are obvious from the inside. All of them are obvious to someone looking at your packaging the way a buyer or customer would.
What Founders Usually Do Instead
When sales are slow, the instinct is to blame the ads. Lower the price. Add a new SKU. Launch on another platform. It’s rarely the algorithm. It’s signals. And signals are fixable, but only once you know which ones are the problem.
Most founders waste an entire production run finding this out the hard way.
How to Actually Fix It
A proper packaging review isn’t aesthetic feedback. It’s commercial diagnosis. It tells you where customers hesitate, where trust drops, what’s hurting your price perception, and what to fix first versus what can wait.
Done properly it covers:
- A competitive shelf analysis showing where you blend in and where you stand out
- A brand and logo verdict: solid, needs refinement, or needs rebuilding
- A packaging and materials breakdown covering hierarchy, legibility, material perception and structural integrity
- Your top three revenue leaks ranked by commercial impact
- A clear roadmap: fix now, upgrade next, full redesign required if
The goal isn’t to tell you what’s wrong. It’s to give you the evidence to make the brave call with confidence.
The Brand and Packaging Performance Audit
I built this for premium CPG founders who suspect something’s off but can’t pinpoint it. Founders who are about to make a production decision and want to get it right. Founders who don’t want to waste another run finding out the hard way.
A $750 audit that tells you exactly what to fix before your next production decision costs less than one bad run.
I’m currently offering two early bird spots to stress test the process before I open it fully. Full deliverables. Full depth. In exchange for honest feedback and a testimonial if it lands.
Get in touch here or find out more about me and my work before you reach out.
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