Packaging Strategies’ third annual Global Pouch West is moving to Las Vegas December 7-8 for one-and-a-half days’ worth of educational sessions, networking and a tabletop exhibition hall.
In less than 25 years, Poly Print has transformed from a regional printer into a national printer, and ongoing investments and upgrades have the printer/laminator poised for more growth.
In just under 25 years, Poly Print has morphed from a regional flexo printer into a national one. It’s branched out from food and beverage markets to serve everything from pharmaceuticals to consumer products.
Without adequate web guiding, it becomes infinitely more difficult for the end converted product to be created to the required specifications and quality.
Today, the co-founder and CEO of McKinney, Texas-based Popular Ink Co., a printer and converter of flexible packaging, is helming a company that’s achieved year-after-year sales growth and is currently on target to reach $30 million in revenue by the end of 2016.
ePac, established via a joint partnership between Emerald Packaging and Arion Partners, is said to be the first greenfield flexible packaging company in North America based exclusively on a digital printing technology platform.
Largest label and printing show in the region returns to the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center in Rosemont, Illinois, for three days of exhibition, networking and education.
According to a recent report from Knowledge Sourcing Intelligence, the North American flexible packaging market is expected to grow at a continuous annual growth rate (CAGR) of 2.07 percent from 2016 to 2021, bringing its total market value to $33.991 billion.
While the front-end benefits of flexible packaging are well documented, there’s still work to be done on the back end. But new innovations are paving the way for greater recyclability.
The flexible packaging industry is now well ahead of pre-recession levels and it’s expected that consolidation through mergers and acquisitions (M&As) will continue.
“Warning: Harmful if put in mouth or swallowed. Eye irritant. Pacs can burst if children put them in mouth or play with them. Keep out of reach of children.”