Your company is growing. The client base is increasing organically, but now it is multiplying as you acquire other businesses. Those companies had their own GTINs. How do you manage them?

Mergers and acquisitions are complicated. It is important to be crystal clear about what you are getting—and not getting. The buyer does not necessarily acquire all the assets of the seller. Read the fine print. If the purchase is  complete, get your legal counsel to clarify who owns the GTINs.

GTIN Ownership

If the GTINs belong to you, there is no need to reassign new GTINs with your company prefix. However, if you re-brand acquired products significantly change the packaging, assign new GTINs. Even if the packaging is almost the same, a new GTIN may be required.

If this sounds excessive, consider these scenarios:

  • There is a price difference in a product after the acquisition
  • Both companies produced some nearly identical products but with slightly different formulations. Now you want to market only one product
  • You are adding a certification and logo to the newly acquired products

The underlying rationale for a new GTIN assignment is easy to understand:

  • A consumer or customer distinguishes a product from a previous version, or from other products
  • A regulatory or liability disclosure requirement
  • Supply chain changes in product shipping, storage or receiving

Old Product or New Product?

This scenario illustrates this well. You make a minor change to a product. The same ingredients are used in its manufacture but the source for one ingredient changes. However, a recall is imposed because there is a problem with the new supplier. Unless the GTIN was changed to distinguish the new product from its predecessor, you will have to recall the entire product line.

There could also be marketing reasons to issue a new GTIN: you want to test a modified form of a legacy product and see how it performs. Let’s say you are repackaging the traditional 100 tablet sales unit in a 120 tablet form. Or you are introducing it in a specific geographic, demographic or some other distinguishable market.

A new GTIN is required if you change, add or delete a price marketed directly on the product packaging. You want to be able to distinguish the former practice from the new. Anything that might trigger a market reaction should be detectable and measurable.

Reassigning an Old GTIN

What if the merger or acquisition obsoletes some GTINs? Effective December 31, 2018, GTINs from discontinued products must not be reassigned to new products. Why? Because there may be inventory of those products lurking is storage areas and warehouses for months or even years. The same GTIN assigned to two different products could be disastrous.

Let us know if you have questions or concerns about GTIN ownership, assignment or management. We can help.

3db Barcode Testimonial

Our company (an advanced software company) recently worked with Barcode Test to source a barcode verifier.  Not long ago, we were awarded a contract requiring products to be marked with IUIDs in accordance with MIL-STD-130.  For that standard, marking labels must pass a verification test that evaluates many variables (contrast, size, clarity, syntax, modularity, and more).  After a thorough search, we reduced our options to a select few.

In our search for a verifier, the Axicon line caught our attention.  Barcode Test is our regional reseller for this product.   From the beginning, they were very prompt with their responses.  We ended up having a quick call with John Nachtrieb to go over our needs.  John was extremely easy to work with and provided a lot of great information.  He was very knowledgeable on the matter and was quick to offer up a demo unit (free of charge).

Upon receiving the demo verifier and testing it, a few questions arose.  John joined a call with us and answered all our questions.  Ultimately, the Axicon verifier wasn’t the best fit for us, so we shipped the demo back.  John was completely understanding.  A few weeks later, Barcode Test reached back out with another possible verifier for us to try.  While they didn’t sell that brand, they just wanted to help us find the best option that met our needs. They even offered to send us the unit that they have in-house to see if it worked to our liking. 

Barcode Test is truly a great company to work with.  Their service and willingness to help the customer are far beyond what you typically get from other companies.  They are experts in barcode quality assurance and seem willing to help in any way they can (even if that means not getting a sale and recommending another option that better fits the customer’s needs).  If anyone is in the market for barcode verification/scanning services or products, I would highly recommend giving Barcode Test a call.

Regards,

Production Manager