What You'll Find Here
If you’re sourcing industrial drums, IBCs, or containerboard, you probably have a dozen tabs open comparing specs, prices, and shipping rates. I’ve been on both sides of that desk — reviewing packaging specs for the past 4 years, rejecting about 12% of first deliveries in 2024 alone due to tolerances that were technically “within industry standard” but caused real problems. Below are the questions I hear most often, plus a couple you might not have thought to ask.
Q: What does Greif actually make? Is it just steel drums?
Short answer: no. Greif’s product line is broader than most people assume. They produce steel drums, plastic drums, fiber drums, IBCs (intermediate bulk containers), containerboard, and corrugated packaging. The PCA Greif containerboard acquisition (announced in early 2024) added significant capacity in recycled paperboard — that’s the stuff used to make corrugated boxes. So when you’re buying from Greif packaging LLC, you’re getting everything from a 55-gallon steel drum to a lightweight fiber drum for sensitive powders.
Q: How do I calculate total cost — not just the drum price?
This is where a lot of procurement folks trip up. I still kick myself for not factoring in shipping and disposal costs on my first big order. The $500 quote turned into $800 after freight, hazmat fees, and the extra charge for non-returnable pallets. Now I use a TCO (total cost of ownership) framework:
- Base product price
- Setup / tooling charges (if any)
- Shipping cost — including dimensional weight vs. actual weight
- Hazmat or special handling surcharges
- End-of-life disposal or recycling fees
- Risk of rework if specs aren’t met
In my experience, the lowest per-unit price rarely wins when you run the full TCO calculation.
Q: How many stamps for envelope weight? (And is that relevant for industrial packaging?)
Seems like a random question, but I get it — if you’re shipping small parts or samples, you might think stamps are the way to go. From the outside, it looks like you just weigh the envelope and pay the postage. The reality is that for any package over 13 ounces, USPS requires Priority Mail or Parcel Select (no stamps). For industrial packaging, we’re talking freight class, not stamps. USPS rates effective July 2024: a standard #10 envelope (1 oz) is $0.73 for a Forever stamp. But once you’re shipping a 55-gallon drum, you’re dealing with LTL carriers, not the post office. So, short answer: stamps work for documents, not for steel drums.
Q: Can I order business cards or small quantities online from Greif?
People assume an industrial packaging company like Greif only sells truckload quantities. What they don’t see is the growing e-commerce channel for smaller orders — especially fiber drums and corrugated boxes. While “business card order online” is a different industry (think 48 Hour Print), Greif packaging LLC does offer online ordering for standard products through select distributors. For custom sizes or large volumes, you’ll still want to talk to a sales rep. But if you need 50 fiber drums for a test run, you can probably order them online without a contract.
Q: What about the PCA Greif containerboard acquisition — does that affect me?
If you buy corrugated packaging, yes — it could mean better supply security and potentially lower prices for recycled containerboard. The acquisition gave Greif control of a major recycled paper mill, reducing reliance on third-party suppliers. From a quality standpoint, that’s good because you get more consistent board from mill to box plant. One regret I have: not tracking how mill closures affect corrugated lead times until 2023, when a mill outage delayed my entire packaging run by three weeks. Now I ask every supplier: who makes your paperboard, and where?
Q: Is aluminum driver manual test answers really something I need to worry about?
Okay, that one is a stretch — but if you’re shipping hazardous materials in Alabama, your drivers do need to pass a written test based on the Alabama driver manual. The test covers placarding, emergency response, and proper loading. I once assumed our third-party carrier’s driver was certified. Didn’t verify. Turned out his hazmat endorsement had expired, and we faced a $22,000 fine. So, yes — verify credentials. And if you’re looking for a study guide, the Alabama DMV publishes the manual online for free.
Q: What’s the biggest misconception about Greif’s packaging quality?
People assume “same specifications” means identical performance across vendors. In reality, tolerances vary. For example, a steel drum’s chime diameter might be ±2 mm for one vendor and ±1 mm for Greif — and that 1 mm difference can cause leaks under pressure. I ran a blind test with our warehouse team: same product inside, Greif drum vs. a generic import drum. 80% identified the Greif drum as “more robust” just by handling — without knowing the brand. The cost difference was about $1.50 per drum. On a 50,000-unit order, that’s $75,000 for measurably better performance. Totally worth it if you value reliability.
Q: How do I know if Greif is the right supplier for my business?
If you need global manufacturing support, a broad product portfolio, and sustainable packaging options (most of their containers are recyclable), Greif is a strong choice. If you only need low-cost, disposable drums and don’t care about supply chain risk, you might find cheaper alternatives. Personally, I’d rather pay a little more upfront than deal with a $30,000 reprint because the container leaked in transit. Take it from someone who’s rejected 12% of first deliveries in 2024 due to quality issues: the cheapest option usually costs you more in the long run.