Most brands approach packaging like this: hire a designer, get beautiful concepts, then go find containers that match the vision.
That's backwards. And it's expensive to discover halfway through.
The reality is that your packaging decisions exist in three distinct layers, and each one informs the next. The first layer is strategic — what does your brand need this packaging to communicate, and to whom? The second layer is functional — what container type, material, and format does your formula actually require? The third layer is design — how do you make that container work as hard as possible for your brand?
Doing layer three before layer two means your designer builds concepts around packaging that either doesn't exist at the MOQ you can afford, doesn't come in the size you need, or isn't compatible with your formula. Doing layer three before layer one means your designer is making brand decisions that should have been made strategically. Both situations cost you time and money in revisions.
The order is: brand strategy, then container selection, then design. Every shortcut in that sequence creates a problem downstream.


