Berlin Packaging FAQ: What a Cost Controller Actually Thinks About B2B Packaging
If you're looking at Berlin Packaging (or any big packaging supplier) for your business, you probably have questions that go beyond the sales brochure. I'm a procurement manager for a 150-person food & beverage company. I've managed our packaging budget (around $180k annually) for 6 years, negotiated with 20+ vendors, and tracked every invoice in our system. Here are the answers I wish I'd had when I started.
Q1: Is Berlin Packaging just a distributor, or do they actually make anything?
This was my first question, too. The short answer is: they're a hybrid. Berlin Packaging is primarily a distributor—they source containers, closures, and packaging from a huge network of manufacturers. But (and this is important) they also have their own design arm, Studio One Eleven, and some manufacturing capabilities through partners.
What I mean is, you're not buying from a factory directly. You're buying from a mega-supplier with a massive catalog. That's good for selection, but it adds a layer between you and the machine that makes your bottle. When I compared a direct manufacturer quote to a Berlin quote for the same glass bottle, the manufacturer was 8% cheaper—on paper. But then I had to factor in freight, customs paperwork (it was an overseas supplier), and quality assurance. Berlin's price included all that. So the "distributor vs. manufacturer" question is really about total cost, not just the line item.
Q2: What's the real catch with "free design services"?
Ah, the classic. Look, free design help sounds great. And sometimes it is—if you're starting from zero. But here's the thing I learned the hard way: "free" often means "tied to our catalog."
In my experience, their designers are fantastic at working within the existing molds and stock items Berlin has access to. Want a custom shape that doesn't exist? That's when the conversation shifts. Suddenly, there's a tooling fee (which makes sense) and a minimum order quantity (MOQ) that's 5x higher. I'm not saying it's a bait-and-switch—it's just the reality of the business model. Their value is in leveraging scale. If your project fits that scale, the free services are a legit benefit. If you need something truly one-of-a-kind, the economics change.
Q3: How do I avoid hidden costs? Give me the real examples.
This is my specialty. Hidden costs aren't usually malicious; they're just parts of the process someone forgot to mention. Here’s where they hide with big suppliers:
- Plate Changes & Setup Fees: You want a different label on the same bottle? That might require a new plate on the printing press. Fee: $150-$400. Ask: "Is this run identical to the last one, down to the Pantone color? If not, what are the changeover costs?"
- Warehousing Holds: They produce your order, but you're not ready to ship it for 30 days. Some suppliers charge a storage fee after 2 weeks. I got hit with a $250 "inventory holding" charge once because our warehouse was backed up.
- "Rush" Isn't One Speed: Need it faster? "Expedited" might mean 10 days instead of 21. "Super Rush" might be 5 days. Each jump can add 15-30% to the cost. Get the specific calendar days, not just the term.
My rule now: I ask for a line-item breakdown that includes production, setup, packaging, warehousing (if any), and freight estimates. If they balk at providing that, it's a red flag.
Q4: Is their pricing competitive, or are you paying for the brand name?
You're paying for the network and the certainty. For standard, off-the-shelf items—say, a 16oz amber Boston round glass bottle—I can often find it slightly cheaper from a regional distributor. Maybe 3-5% cheaper.
But (and this is a big "but") Berlin's advantage is availability and redundancy. During the supply chain mess of 2022-2023, when my usual regional guy was out of stock for 4 months, Berlin had that bottle in a warehouse in Ohio because they source from multiple glass plants. That reliability saved a production line from shutting down. So, is their catalog price the absolute lowest? Not always. Is the total cost of ownership, which includes risk of stock-outs, lower? Often, yes. For mission-critical packaging, that's worth a small premium.
Q5> What's something you didn't ask but should? The MOQ trap.
Everyone asks about Minimum Order Quantity. But the trap isn't the MOQ itself—it's the economic MOQ versus the technical MOQ.
Let me explain. A supplier might say the MOQ for a custom spray bottle is 10,000 units (the technical MOQ—the smallest run the factory will do). But the price per unit at 10k might be $1.50. At 25k units, it drops to $1.10. That 40-cent difference changes your whole business case. The real question isn't "What's your MOQ?" It's "At what quantity does the price per unit become viable for my business model?" I've walked away from "low MOQ" offers because the unit economics only made sense at triple that volume, which was more than I could sell in two years.
Q6: How do they handle mistakes or quality issues?
This is the true test of any supplier. My experience has been... procedural. They have a clear, documented claims process. You file a report, provide photos/samples, they investigate with the manufacturer, and then issue a credit or reprint.
The good: It's formal and you get a paper trail. The stressful part: The investigation can take 2-3 weeks. You might be sitting on 5,000 defective jars while you wait. My advice? Build time for this into your production schedule. And always, always approve a physical production sample before the full run is made, even if it costs $200. That $200 sample caught a misaligned label for us once, saving a $12,000 reprint.
Q7> Would you recommend them? Give it to me straight.
It depends. Annoying answer, I know. But here's my straight take:
Yes, recommend Berlin Packaging if: You need a wide variety of packaging types (glass, plastic, closures), you value supply chain certainty over the absolute lowest price, and your volumes are solidly in the mid-to-high range (think thousands of units per SKU, not hundreds). Their system is built for that.
Look elsewhere if: You have a single, simple, high-volume item (go direct to a manufacturer). Or if you're a tiny startup ordering 500 pieces total—the system might feel overwhelming, and a smaller, local distributor might give you more hand-holding.
For my company, in the food business with a dozen SKUs and no room for packaging delays, they're a core supplier. I sleep better at night. But I still get competitive quotes every 18 months—because even when you have a good partner, a cost controller's job is never done.