——When the spice section of supermarkets loses 30% of potential customers due to "disorderly stacking", a "talking" desktop display box is rewriting the rules
Is there anyone like me who wants to buy freshly ground black pepper, but the bottles are all packed together and the labels cannot be seen clearly... This scene is repeated every day in millions of supermarkets around the world - spices face pain points such as "chaotic display, difficult to find customers, and lost sales" due to their small size and variety. Recently, a Chinese supermarket spice desktop display box with a design of "clear classification+scene guidance" has become a "traffic savior" for supermarkets in Europe, America, and Southeast Asia, and has even been referred to by local media as a "navigation device" for kitchen seasoning.
The display box adopts a sloping layered structure, with each layer accurately divided according to usage frequency: the top layer contains common seasonings such as salt, sugar, and freshly ground black pepper, while the middle and bottom layers contain grilled meat spice packs and stewed soup ingredient packs. Each layer is labeled with eye-catching tags, and customers can easily locate the target at a glance.
Considering the high frequency replenishment and global transportation needs of supermarkets, the display box is made of FSC certified environmentally friendly cardboard (thickness 2mm, bearing 5kg without deformation), covered with waterproof film (anti oil and anti condensation) on the surface, which is both durable and meets the EU's environmental standard of "recyclability rate ≥ 80%". The box body also reserves a "customization area" that supports supermarkets to print brand logos or localized slogans, further enhancing the affinity for "localization".
From "messy shelves" to "flavor navigator", the success of this spice desktop display box in supermarkets not only provides products, but also offers full chain services from design to implementation - supporting multilingual customization, fast sampling, cross-border logistics, and helping more Chinese supply chain enterprises seize the dividends of global supermarket "display upgrades". ”