Your Packaging Is Saying More Than You Think

 

Consumers create and assign meaning to many things. As a brand, some of that is out of your control. Much of it isn’t.

Consider the name “Corona” during the pandemic. Not controllable. But how the brand showed up during a time of crisis absolutely was.

When it comes to packaging, nearly everything is a choice.

Some decisions are shaped by category norms like structure or dispensing method (though you can choose to disrupt the status quo and end up re-shaping an entire shelf and a few adjacent ones, like Graza did). Others, like packaging color, material, and finish, are more flexible. These elements can be adjusted more frequently, and they have an immediate impact on how a product is perceived and what it signals to consumers.

CPG packaging collection on shelves at Kaleidoscope studio, Chicago

Color Communicates Before Words Do

Take color. Pastels tend to signal softness and approachability, often skewing younger and more feminine. Brands like Bloom and Saint James understand exactly who they’re speaking to. Bolder palettes can feel more energetic or value-driven. Full-flood color versus partial application, saturation, contrast—each of these decisions carries meaning, often subconsciously. A brand can feel optimistic, intelligent, youthful, or honest before a consumer ever reads a word.

 

Finish Signals What Words Can’t

Finish operates the same way. Matte versus gloss can signal entirely different things depending on the category. In tortilla chips, matte packaging has increasingly become shorthand for handmade, rustic, and authentic. Tostitos’ recent transition to matte bags is a move that resembles many craft competitors. For a consumer, that subtle cue can be the difference between “this fits me” and “this doesn’t.”

 

Material Carries Brand Truth

Material is a brand truth-teller, too. We don’t want our “healthy” beverages in plastic, but a paper pouch for sugar-free candy can feel more virtuous. In a world shaped by evolving sustainability expectations and EPR, material choices carry both functional and perceptual weight. For new brands especially, choosing the wrong material can unintentionally send the wrong message about your brand out of the gate.

These signals aren’t accidental. They’re designed. And they directly influence how consumers interpret, trust, and choose brands.

 

How Kaleidoscope Approaches CMF

CMF decisions are nuanced and multi-faceted, and we put consumers at the heart of them. At Kaleidoscope, we help brands navigate these decisions intentionally. Through hands-on workshops, we evaluate color, material, and finish combinations—both physical and digital—to ensure the entire packaging experience delivers on the essence of the brand and connects meaningfully with the people who buy it.

Because when every detail is shaping perception, nothing can be left to chance.

 

About the Author
Melissa Simmerman
Melissa Simmerman
Sr. Director, Growth & Strategy

April 6, 2026

With over 20 years of experience in brand strategy and communications, Melissa approaches projects with energy and a passion for consumer insights. Drawing on a diverse background including writing, portfolio architecture, content creation, and brand activation, Melissa brings a unique combination of strategic leadership, creative inspiration, and solution-driven thinking to any challenge.

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