Be in to WIN a $10,000 Packaging Health Check

Download The Packaging Design Process Checklist and enter to win a $10,000 Packaging Health Check - Stickybeak consumer insights paired with a Mind Control packaging audit. Open to brands in Australia and New Zealand.
July 1, 2026

We're giving one Australian or New Zealand brand a $10,000 AUD Packaging Health Check - a complete review of their packaging that pairs Stickybeak's consumer insights with Mind Control's packaging strategy expertise.

Great packaging doesn't happen by accident. It has to work in seconds, at the moment of purchase, sitting next to 40 competitors trying to do the same thing. That's why we teamed up with packaging and brand specialists Mind Control to build The Packaging Design Process Checklist - the full process for a redesign that wins on shelf, from commercial brief to shelf-ready system. Now we're giving one brand the chance to put that process into practice, for free.

How to enter

Download The Packaging Design Process Checklist and answer one simple question: what's your biggest packaging challenge? That's it, your entry's in. Open to individual marketers at FMCG brands in Australia and New Zealand, aged 18+. Entries close 11:59pm NZST, 10 August 2026. Full terms and conditions here →

What the winner receives

Stickybeak Consumer Insights Package

  • 1 x Stickybeak consumer test - 200 respondents, 1 market
  • Testing focused on one or more of: purchase behaviour, product preferences, purchase drivers, and current packaging performance / screen testing
  • Designed to deliver clear, decision-ready insight - not just data

Mind Control Brand & Packaging Audit

  • Packaging design review
  • Eye-tracking analysis
  • Competitive shelf audit
  • Interpretation of Stickybeak research findings
  • A clear synthesis of insights into a straightforward design strategy

Every output is contextualised and translated into guidance a brand can actually act on - ready for internal teams or agency execution.

Because packaging that only looks good in a presentation isn't enough. It has to work in the real world.