White-label product
A white label product is a product or service produced by one company (the producer) that other companies (the marketers) rebrand to make it appear as if they had made it.[1][2]
History
The name derives from the image of a white label on the packaging that can be filled in with the marketer's trade dress. Its origins can be traced to vinyl records.[3] Before records were to be released to the public, often before official artwork was designed and printed, promotional copies were sent out in a white sleeve to DJs to solicit radio and nightclub play, in an effort to build hype and gauge public interest by the record labels, ultimately to better estimate manufacturing quantities. This created a situation where certain respected or well-connected DJs would have exclusive copies of material, immediately increasing demand on certain big records. Occasionally this term refers to records whose labels had been torn off or covered with a white label by competing DJs to conceal which records they were using.
Common use
White label production is often used for mass-produced generic products including electronics,[4] consumer products and software packages[5] such as DVD players, televisions, and web applications. Some companies maintain a sub-brand for their goods, for example the same model of DVD player may be sold by Dixons as a Saisho and by Currys as a Matsui, which are brands exclusively used by those companies.[6]
Some websites use white labels to enable a successful brand to offer a service without having to invest in creating the technology and infrastructure itself. Many IT and modern marketing companies outsource or use white-label companies and services to provide specialist services without having to invest in developing their own product.
Most supermarket private brand or store brand products are provided by companies that sell to multiple supermarkets, changing only the labels. In addition, some manufacturers create low-cost generic brand labels with only the name of the product ("Cola"). Richelieu Foods, for example, is a private label food manufacturing company producing frozen pizza, salad dressing, sauces, marinades, condiments, and deli salads for other companies, including Hy-Vee, Aldi, Save-A-Lot, Sam's Club,[7] Hannaford Brothers Co.,[8] BJ's Wholesale Club (Earth's Pride brand), and Shaw's Supermarkets (Culinary Circle brand).[8]
Smaller banks sometimes outsource their credit-card or check processing operations to larger banks, which issues and processes the credit cards as white label cards, typically for a fee, allowing the smaller bank to brand the cards as their own without having to invest in the necessary infrastructure. A current example of this is Cuscal Limited providing white label card and transactional products to Credit Unions in Australia or Simple (formerly BankSimple) in the United States which issues bank accounts and debit cards operated by The Bancorp Bank.[9]
In Southern California, City National Bank (CNB) is the largest check processor in that half of the state, because in addition to checks issued by its own customers, CNB processes checks for the customers of more than 60 smaller Southern California banks.
Many software companies offer white label software to agencies or other customers, including the possibility to resell the software under the customer’s brand. This typically requires functionalities such as the adaptation of the software’s visual appearance, multi-customer management and automatic billing to the end-customers based on usage parameters.
See also
Look up white label in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
References
- ↑ "White Label Product". Investopedia. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
- ↑ Drew Gainor (June 3, 2014). "Why A White Label Solution Is Easier Than Building Your Own". Forbes. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
- ↑ Jane Fitz (March 11, 2014). "Stamp Collecting: The Mystery of White Label Vinyl". Meoko. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
- ↑ Evan Blass (July 16, 2012). "Can HTC avoid past mistakes in its latest incarnation?". Mashable. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
- ↑ Sean Hollister (May 16, 2012). "Ubitus GameCloud: the white-label cloud gaming service seeking a US audience". The Verge. Retrieved August 13, 2015.
- ↑ Alka Katwala (September 2009). "Fade to White: Trade-Finance White Labels as Part of a Growth Strategy". jpmorganchase.com.
- ↑ "Richelieu experiences hiring boom, starts expansion". WCFcourier.com, RC Balaban, August 27, 2006.
- 1 2 Lisa van der Pool (23 February 2009). "There's new appetite for peddlers of cheap eats". Boston Business Journal.
- ↑ "Simple: The Bancorp Bank Privacy Practices".