Berry Global Login, Amazon Labels & Water Bottle Tags: A Procurement Manager's FAQ on Packaging & Shipping
If you're managing packaging or shipping for your company, you've probably got a mix of big strategic questions and small, annoying practical ones. I'm a procurement manager at a 150-person consumer goods company. I've managed our packaging and logistics budget (around $220,000 annually) for 6 years, negotiated with 20+ vendors, and documented every order and invoice in our cost tracking system. Here are the answers to the questions I've actually had to look up—or learned the hard way.
1. What's the deal with "Berry Global Login" and supplier portals?
You're probably looking for the Laddawn Berry Global login portal (laddawn.berryglobal.com). Laddawn is a division of Berry Global that focuses on flexible packaging, like pouches. From my perspective, these supplier portals are a double-edged sword.
On one hand, they're great for tracking orders, accessing specs, and getting invoices. On the other, they often lock you into a specific workflow. I went back and forth between using a vendor's portal versus having everything emailed to our central procurement email for two weeks. The portal offered real-time tracking; having everything in our email made cross-vendor analysis easier. Ultimately, I chose to use the portal for active orders but download and file every document in our own system. Why? Because if we switch vendors, our data history stays intact. That decision has saved me hours of digging for old POs.
2. Is "Berry Global aluminum packaging technology" a real advantage, or just marketing?
This one matters if you need high-barrier packaging for food, beverage, or healthcare. In my opinion, based on comparing specs and running trials, it's a real technical edge for them. Aluminum packaging provides superior oxygen and moisture barrier compared to many plastics, which is critical for product shelf life.
But here's the cost controller's take: the advantage only matters if you need that level of protection. For our line of shelf-stable sauces, switching to a specific Berry aluminum-laminated pouch from a standard plastic one extended our shelf-life projections by about 30%. That justified a 15% unit cost increase because it reduced potential waste and opened up new distribution channels. However, for a dry good like crackers, the premium wouldn't be worth it. Always tie the "technology" to a measurable business outcome—shelf life, shipping damage reduction, material reduction—in your TCO model.
3. Where is the Amazon order number on a shipping label?
This is a daily practical headache. The Amazon order number (like 112-1234567-8901234) is not always prominently displayed on the carrier label (USPS, UPS, FedEx).
Here's what I've found, after tracking hundreds of these: Look for a barcode with a number beneath it that starts with "TBA" (for Amazon Logistics) or a long string that includes your order number, often in smaller print near the carrier's tracking barcode. Sometimes it's labeled "SHIPMENT ID." The carrier's own tracking number will be the most visible. I built a simple one-page guide for our receiving dock with screenshots because the 5 minutes it takes to find the right number manually adds up across dozens of packages. (Should mention: for B2B Amazon Business orders, the PO number you entered should be on the packing slip inside, not always the label.)
4. We need custom name tags for water bottles (like for a team event). What's the most cost-effective way?
Ah, the "big Nike water bottle" or generic promo bottle dilemma. We've done this for corporate events. The most cost-effective method depends on quantity:
- Small batch (50-100 units): Use waterproof vinyl labels printed on a desktop label printer. You can design and print them in-house. The per-unit cost is low, but labor is high. I want to say we spent about $0.25 per label in material, plus an hour of staff time.
- Medium batch (100-500 units): Order pre-printed adhesive name tags from a promo product supplier. This is where a vendor like Berry Global (or their competitors in rigid packaging/containers) might come in if you're ordering the bottles and tags together. Get quotes for the bottles with the tags applied versus separate.
- Large batch (500+): Go straight to the bottle supplier and have them silkscreen or digitally print the names directly on the bottle. The setup cost is higher, but the per-unit cost plummets, and durability is best. For 1,000 units, this usually ended up being 40-50% cheaper per finished unit than applying labels post-production, in my experience.
The hidden cost? Time. In-house labeling always takes twice as long as you think. Factor that labor into your TCO.
5. How do you compare packaging suppliers when costs are close?
When the bids are within 5% of each other, price becomes a secondary factor. This is where my gut vs. data conflict happens. The numbers said go with Vendor B—3% cheaper with identical material specs. My gut said stick with Vendor A, who was more responsive during the quoting process.
I went with my gut. Later, when we had a rush deadline change, Vendor A's project manager answered my email in 20 minutes and adjusted the schedule. Vendor B, I learned from an industry contact, typically had a 24-hour response time. That "slow to reply" during bidding was a preview of their operational pace. The way I see it, reliability and communication are part of the total cost. A delay can be far more expensive than a 3% price savings.
My checklist for a tie-breaker now includes: response time to emails, clarity of their terms & conditions, willingness to provide samples, and references for similar projects. Don't hold me to this, but I'd argue that for critical packaging, paying a 2-5% premium for a truly responsive partner is just cheap insurance.
6. What's one thing you wish you'd known earlier about managing packaging costs?
That "free design" or "free setup" offers aren't really free. They're baked into the unit price over the life of the order.
Early on, I was thrilled when a vendor offered free design work for a new pouch. The numbers said go with them—the per-unit cost was competitive. I almost did until I calculated the TCO over our projected 3-year volume. Their per-unit price was about 8% higher than a vendor who charged a one-time $750 setup fee. Over 100,000 units, the "free" design cost us an extra $6,000+ hidden in the unit price. Now, our procurement policy requires vendors to break out one-time setup/NRE (Non-Recurring Engineering) costs separately from the recurring unit cost. It makes comparison actually transparent.
That lesson—to always unbundle the costs—has saved us more than any single vendor negotiation. It turns out most problems in procurement are preventable with the right checklist. Creating that cost breakdown checklist after my third mistake has probably saved us an estimated $15,000 in hidden fees over the years.