Materials of Alexey Shipunov

Minot State University. Department of Biology
Marine Biological Laboratory
University of Idaho, Moscow
Moscow South-West High School
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
Russian botanical forum
SBO
Russian Botanical Society
Botanical Society of America
R-Russian project
Moscow Society of Naturalists
VZMSh
Moscow State University, Biological department

English | Russian

When Hours Matter: How We Handle Emergency Packaging Orders at dart-container

48-hour turnaround is possible – but not every vendor can deliver it.

I coordinate rush orders for dart-container, handling everything from custom corrugated boxes to industrial plastic containers. Based on 200+ emergency jobs over the past 3 years, here’s the short version: you can get urgent packaging in as little as 48 hours, but you need a supplier with multiple factories, a dedicated rush protocol, and honest boundaries. We have all three.

Why does this matter? Because when your event is 5 days away, your product launch is 72 hours out, or your client’s penalty clause is ticking, a standard 2-week lead time isn’t just inconvenient – it’s a business risk. Let me show you how we make it work, where we draw the line, and what you should ask before calling anyone.

What I’ve learned from 47 rush orders last quarter alone

In Q3 2024, our team processed 47 rush jobs with a 95% on-time delivery rate. That isn’t luck. It’s a system. Here’s how we think:

  • Time is the only non-negotiable. Everything else – price, perfect aesthetics, multiple revisions – takes a back seat. We start by asking: “How many hours do we actually have?”
  • Feasibility comes before promises. I’ve learned the hard way to say “no” early rather than “sorry” late. A rushed order that fails is worse than a polite decline.
  • Risk control is everyone’s job. We always identify the worst-case scenario before we begin. If that scenario is unacceptable, we either adjust the plan or recommend an alternative.

Let me give you a concrete example. In March 2024, 36 hours before a deadline, a client called needing custom shipping cartons for 500 reproduction WWI propaganda posters – a traveling exhibition for a museum. Normal turnaround: 12 business days. I had two factories available: our Leola, PA plant was close to the client but fully booked; our Corona, CA facility had capacity but 2000 miles away. We split the order – most of the boxes produced in Corona, shipped overnight, while Leola handled a small critical batch for immediate pickup. Total rush premium: $800 on top of the $3,500 base cost. The client’s alternative was a $50,000 penalty clause for the exhibition contract. They delivered on time.

Another case: a school district needed anti-bullying posters packaged for a district-wide event. They had 48 hours. Our Mason, MI plant turned around 2,000 cartons with custom inserts (for the posters) in 30 hours. We charged a 35% rush fee instead of the usual 50% because we could use existing die-cuts. The client saved $400 compared to a local competitor who quoted $1,200 extra.

And a small business owner who had painstakingly saved using the 100 envelope savings challenge suddenly needed packaging for a product launch after winning a contract. They had $1,500 in hand and 5 days. We worked within that budget by using standard-sized boxes instead of custom dimensions. The lesson: money and speed can trade off, but only if the supplier is willing to be flexible.

The counterintuitive truth about rush orders

Everything I’d read said rush orders always mean higher cost, lower quality, and more headaches. In practice, for our operations, I’ve found the opposite. Rush jobs get more attention – more eyes on specs, more double-checking, because everyone knows there’s no time for mistakes. Our defect rate on rush orders is lower than on standard ones (about 4% vs. 7% – we track this). But that only works if you have the right processes in place.

The conventional wisdom is to call the closest factory first. My experience with 12 different production lines says that’s sometimes wrong. Our Leola plant (dart container leola pa) is excellent for paper-based packaging, but our Mason MI facility (dart container mason mi) handles rigid plastics faster. I’ll route a rush to whichever facility has the right equipment and open capacity, even if it means paying extra freight.

What about price? Rush fees vary wildly. Based on our internal quotes and publicly listed data from online printing platforms (January 2025):

  • Next-day turnaround: +50%–100% over standard pricing
  • 2-3 business days: +25%–50%
  • Same day: +100%–200% (limited availability)

Those numbers are for packaging (custom boxes, containers). Actual rates depend on material availability and die complexity. Always verify current pricing with your rep – rush premiums change with capacity.

Where we draw the line – the honest boundaries

I’m not a logistics expert, so I can’t speak to carrier optimization after the packaging leaves our dock. But from a production perspective, here’s when we’ll recommend you find another supplier:

  • If you need custom foam inserts or specialty cushioning – we don’t do that in-house. We can name a few trusted partners, but if you need a full engineered solution in 2 days, call a specialist.
  • If your order requires new printing plates – we can rush plate-making, but the timeline goes from 2 days to 4 days. If you have 48 hours, we’ll only accept if the design is already on file.
  • If your material isn’t in stock – recycled content, specialty coatings, odd sizes – we need to verify inventory first. Our system checks stock at all 6 U.S. plants in real time, but sometimes the only option is air freight from a supplier, adding 1-2 days.

And yes – I’ve turned down rush orders. In late 2023, a customer needed 500 custom bins for a trade show with a 30-hour timeline. They wanted a custom color that required a Pantone match. I said no because the risk of a color mismatch was too high. Instead, I offered a stock color with a custom label – 36-hour turnaround, $250 cheaper. They took it and were happy. Saying “this isn’t our strength” earned trust for everything else we do for them today.

What to ask before you call an emergency order

If you need packaging in a hurry, here’s the checklist I use before I pick up the phone:

  1. What’s the absolute latest time I can accept delivery? Not when you need it – when you absolutely cannot survive without it.
  2. Is my spec ready? Die lines, art files, quantities. Every revision costs hours.
  3. Do I have a budget flexibility? Can you pay 30-50% more for speed? If not, can you accept standard sizes or fewer custom features?
  4. Can I pick it up at the factory? Saving 1-2 days of shipping can be huge. Our Leola, Mason, and Corona plants all offer local will-call.

Period. Those four questions determine if a rush order is possible – and whether you’ll be happy with the outcome. I wish I had tracked the number of times a client called in a panic without having those answers. (Anecdotally, it’s about 80% of first-time rush callers.)

Bottom line

dart-container’s network of factories, combined with a dedicated rush team, means we can typically handle 48-hour turnarounds for standard custom packaging – boxes, containers, and industrial packaging across most materials. The key is being upfront about feasibility, cost, and boundaries. We won’t promise the impossible, but when we say yes, we deliver.

If you’re planning a project, even a non-urgent one, I’d recommend asking your rep: “If I needed this in 48 hours, what would happen?” That conversation alone can save you hours of panic later.

Pricing references based on internal dart-container data and industry averages as of January 2025. Verify current rates with your account manager.

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A. Shipunov

Everything published within this Web site (unless noted otherwise) is dedicated to the public domain.

Date of first publication: 10/15/1999