E-commerce Packaging Leader MoveWell UK Transforms Production with Hybrid Printing

“We needed to add nearly 80 seasonal SKUs without adding another line or losing sleep over color drift,” says Daniel Clarke, Operations Manager at MoveWell UK. “And we had to keep the presses rolling through peak moving season.” The team looked at hybridizing their corrugated print—pairing flexo for long runs with single-pass inkjet for the oddballs. They also brought in partners who could move as fast as they did.

The brand partnered with papermart on a sourcing and print-readiness program, from carton specs to inner wraps, while our plant team focused on throughput, FPY, and changeovers. It wasn’t a silver bullet—nothing is—but it gave us a way to scale SKUs without bloating inventory or scrambling the schedule.

Here’s the inside story of what changed on the floor, what almost went sideways, and why a hybrid print strategy now underpins how MoveWell UK serves both wholesale and e-commerce customers.

Company Overview and History

MoveWell UK started in 2013 selling a tight five-SKU line of corrugated kits—small, medium, wardrobe, TV boxes, plus tape. The company now serves national retailers and a growing direct channel across the country. The core product remains corrugated board, mostly B- and E-flute, printed for clear handling cues and quick shelf recognition. In the last two years, the direct-to-door segment surged, especially for kits marketed as moving house boxes uk, which pushed variability and on-demand needs to the foreground.

We often get a retail-facing question: “where to buy cardboard boxes for moving?” From my side of the plant, the answer is about service level: buy where color holds steady, board weight is true, and the tape sticks. Retailers and direct sites matter, and so do partners like papermart when we’re tying supply to print-readiness. That’s the less glamorous but very real backbone of a reliable purchase experience.

Quality and Consistency Issues

Before the change, we were fighting a few predictable fires. Long-run flexo could drift by ΔE 3.0–3.5 on some spot colors after plate changes, especially on recycled liners. Our reject rate hovered in the 7–9% band on certain kits—too high for a margin-thin category. First Pass Yield sat around 82–85% on short runs because setups chewed time and early sheets went to scrap. None of this was catastrophic, but under seasonal load it strained the schedule.

Sustainability brought another wrinkle. We trialed bundles marketed against used moving boxes programs—great for the planet, trickier for color. Reclaimed or high-recycled content corrugates vary in brightness and ink holdout. We needed a tighter process window so the same orange handled cues would read consistently, even when the board wasn’t pristine white. That’s where better process control and measured tolerances mattered more than any one press spec sheet.

There were also changeover realities. Swapping plates and aniloxes to chase 30–50 carton runs burned 35–45 minutes and created micro-jams downstream at die-cut. We knew we couldn’t plate our way out of fast-moving seasonal SKUs. A different approach was required.

Solution Design and Configuration

We kept flexo for base volumes: 2-color, 100–120 lpi on corrugated board with water-based ink for durability and cost control. For the short-run and seasonal layer, we integrated single-pass inkjet at 600×600 dpi using UV Ink on pre-printed topsheets. That let us handle variable data and small batches without shutting the line for plates. Structural finishing stayed familiar: die-cutting, gluing, and window patching only on accessories. We set ΔE targets below 2.0–2.5 for key brand hues and aligned to ISO 12647 references to keep measurement, not opinion, in charge.

Packaging experience mattered beyond the box. For fragile items and gifting kits, we added branded wraps using papermart tissue paper—simple, scalable, and a surprisingly big signal of quality for online buyers. Flexo still covers the heaviest movers; digital fills the gaps. The hybrid path isn’t perfection—ink adhesion on some high-recycled liners still needs careful preflight—but it is a workable operating model.

We also re-laid die-cut nests to trim waste. Moving from a legacy 2-up to an alternating 3-up on select sizes cut trim loss by roughly 20–25%, depending on sheet size. It sounds small; on a high-volume line it matters. Ink recipes were standardized into a 24-color shelf to limit mixing and speed washdowns.

Pilot Production and Validation

We ran a three-week pilot across six SKUs: two wardrobe, two TV, and two multipack kits. Substrates covered both B- and E-flute, including high-recycled liners to stress-test ink laydown. A simple rule helped: flexo for any run above 8,000 cartons, digital for anything under 2,500, and a case-by-case call in the middle. Operators rotated between modules with a checklist for calibration and color checks. We logged ΔE every 2,000 sheets and tracked FPY, waste, and changeover time on a shared dashboard.

On the commercial side, distribution planning synced better after we pushed accurate pack specs early to retail partners and, for North America, pointed inquiries toward papermart locations when buyers wanted an immediate pickup option. Not every pilot day was pretty. A damp week threw moisture at the liners and slowed die-cut slightly. We learned to precondition stacks and adjust glue temps, which is now in the SOP.

Quantitative Results and Metrics

Numbers tell the story we care about on the floor. Waste on the short-run layer dropped by roughly 20–25% once we stopped plating small jobs and adopted digital topsheets. FPY climbed into the 92–94% range on those same runs. Average changeover time fell from 35–45 minutes to about 20–25 minutes, since most swaps became profile and file changes rather than plates and aniloxes. On long-run flexo, tighter control kept ΔE within 2.0–2.5 for key hues, so brand cues held up under store lighting.

Throughput rose by about 15–18% during peak weeks, enough headroom to add SKUs without touching our footprint. OEE moved from the mid-60s to the mid-to-high 70s once the early-scrap hump eased. On-time delivery rates shifted from roughly 88% to around 95% in the first season. The payback math penciled out at 12–16 months, depending on how you allocate labor and plate spend. Carbon per pack edged down an estimated 8–12% thanks to lower scrap and smarter nesting—directionally right, if not a lab-grade study.

Are there trade-offs? Yes. Digital ink cost per square meter is higher, so we’re careful about which SKUs we route there. Flexo still owns the heavy lifters. But our seasonal “move kits” program is now predictable, and the unboxing touch—the tissue, the clean print, the right glue—lets the retail team answer the everyday question of where to buy with confidence, whether that’s our store, a retailer, or partners like papermart. And yes, we still recommend the basics: correct board weight, true dimensions, and tape that holds.