
Walk down any store aisle and you will see something fascinating happening. Products you think you know suddenly look different. New colors, new packaging, new messaging. That is not random. It is brand management in action.
Companies regularly refresh their brands to stay relevant with changing consumers. Consider how Procter & Gamble is rethinking packaging across brands like Olay and Tide. Their latest packaging innovations focus on accessibility and sustainability. One moisturizer jar now includes a tactile symbol on the lid so visually impaired consumers can identify the product by touch. Tide has also experimented with laser-marked packaging that removes traditional labels and adhesives, making bottles easier to recycle. These small design changes reflect a larger strategy. Packaging is part of the product experience.
Other brands are refreshing their visual identity to stand out on crowded shelves. Vitaminwater recently redesigned its bottles with brighter colors, a larger logo and playful messaging aimed at younger consumers. The goal is simple but powerful. When shoppers scan a shelf in seconds, bold packaging helps them instantly recognize the brand and flavor.
Sometimes a refresh signals a broader repositioning. Organic food company Nature’s Path updated its logo, photography and packaging layout to emphasize ingredients and make products easier to find in busy cereal aisles. Meanwhile, the energy drink brand Update relaunched with minimalist pastel cans and the influence of co-founder Kim Kardashian to appeal to younger wellness-focused consumers.
Packaging is not just a container. It communicates brand identity, attracts attention, and signals what the product stands for. A thoughtful refresh can help a familiar product feel new again without changing what customers already love.
Discussion Questions and Activities
- Why is packaging often considered a critical part of brand management and product strategy?
- How can a packaging refresh help a brand stay relevant with younger consumers? What risks might a company face when updating a well-known product’s packaging or design?
- How do sustainability and accessibility influence modern packaging decisions?
- When should a company refresh a brand versus completely reposition it?
- Brand Refresh Investigation. Students research recent brand refreshes using marketing and design websites such as Packaging Digest. Ask students to identify what changed and assess the strategy behind the changes.
- Shelf Test Challenge. Ask students to visit a grocery or convenience store and photograph three products that recently refreshed their packaging. Students should analyze what changed and why it might attract shoppers.
- Redesign the Package. In small groups, students select an existing snack or beverage brand and sketch a new package design aimed at Gen Z consumers. Each group explains how their design improves brand recognition and communicates the product’s value.
Sources: Barkho, Gabriela (5 Mar 2026), Kim Kardashian’s Update is the latest brand to give energy drinks a refresh with women in mind, Modern Retail; Nudd, Tim (27 May 2025), Vitaminwater’s packaging overhaul features larger logo and full-bleed labels, Ad Age; P&G Blog (27 Feb 2026), P&G Brands Recognized for Packaging That’s Accessible and Sustainable, Proctor and Gamble; Sosland, Zachary (6 Mar 2026), Nature’s Path Organic Foods is rebranding its packaging and logo in honor of the company’s 40th anniversary, Food Business News;




