{"id":451,"date":"2026-04-27T03:38:06","date_gmt":"2026-04-27T03:38:06","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/isbmblowmolding.com\/?p=451"},"modified":"2026-04-27T03:43:18","modified_gmt":"2026-04-27T03:43:18","slug":"isbm-case-study-sydney-cosmetic-bottles","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/isbmblowmolding.com\/nl\/application\/isbm-case-study-sydney-cosmetic-bottles\/","title":{"rendered":"ISBM Case Study: Sydney Cosmetic Brand\u2019s First Year Results"},"content":{"rendered":"
An ISBM machine case study<\/strong> documenting the operational and financial transition of a Western Sydney cosmetic contract manufacturer, anonymised at the client’s request.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n Client:<\/strong> Cosmetic contract manufacturer, Western Sydney<\/p>\n Industry:<\/strong> Skincare and personal care, primarily serving Australian and Asia-Pacific brand owners<\/p>\n Products:<\/strong> 30 ml serum, 100 ml toner, 250 ml lotion bottles (PET and Tritan)<\/p>\n Project span:<\/strong> 14 months from PO to current state (commissioning + full production scale-up)<\/p>\n<\/div>\n The client had built a respectable contract cosmetic packaging business serving 14 brand owners across Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, and Auckland, filling and assembling bottles purchased from a Sydney-based bottle distributor. Monthly volume averaged 90,000 bottles across 22 SKUs. Margin per bottle was thin \u2014 around AUD 0.04\u20130.06 \u2014 because the bottle distributor’s markup absorbed most of the upside that flowed through to higher retail price points. Their core business was assembly, labelling, and filling; bottle supply was a cost pass-through with limited room to compete on.<\/p>\n Three pressures accumulated through 2024 and early 2025 that forced a reconsideration of the supply model. Container freight from Asia became unreliable, with the bottle distributor passing through delays of 2\u20136 weeks on stock replenishment. The bottle distributor announced a 14% price rise effective Q3 2024, citing freight and resin cost pressures. And two important client brands threatened to take their business to competitors who could turn around custom bottle shapes faster \u2014 bottle shapes that the distributor’s stock catalogue did not include and that custom-tooled imports took 14+ weeks to deliver.<\/p>\n The choice crystallised: lose accounts and accept margin compression, or invest in in-house bottle production. The brand owners involved had clearly signalled willingness to pay more for faster turnaround on custom bottle shapes \u2014 meaning the upside of in-house production was not just cost reduction but new revenue capture from contract work the existing model could not service.<\/p>\n Initial conversations explored three machine configurations: a single 6-station for maximum throughput, two 3-station machines for redundancy, and a single 4-station for balance. The 6-station option was ruled out fast \u2014 too much idle capacity at 90k\u2013300k bottles per month, and changeover time too long for a 22-SKU operation. Capital cost (estimated AUD 750k+ all-in) was also outside the client’s investment authority threshold. The 3-station pair would cover volume but lacked the wall-thickness consistency needed for the Tritan baby-grade serum bottles one important client required.<\/p>\nThe Situation Before<\/h2>\n
<\/p>\nThe Specification Process<\/h2>\n