Avery is targeting these products to small business owners, along with people who sell their wares at smaller venues like festivals and fairs, possibly even for booths at larger sales conventions...but if you're an inventor like me, you can even use these labels to create professional looking package mock-ups (SWAG) for your invention for presenting to companies for possible licensing. The farther down the line you can present your product idea to someone, showing possible look and size of packaging of your new product, the more of a chance they will "get it".
If you're going to market with a product, you'll obviously pay much more per individual label by using the Avery labels versus going to a company that prints labels for longer runs. Those companies will provide you with a much lower cost per label, but with the offset of requiring much higher minimum orders requiring significant cash outlay...which many times small business start-ups don't have. It depends where you're at, but investing in 2000 labels may mean you have 20 times more labels than hard product to sell to the public.
Many times it could be better for a small business starting to sell a new product to spend sparse capital on a good graphic designer to design the best packaging...than to spend the money on producing higher quality labels. It’s more important to work on getting the packaging art work to match your product the best...and at the same time be the most impulsive to pick up and review for potential customers. When the time comes that your product sales reach critical mass (you'll know when because you are having a hard time fulfilling purchase orders), then move to contract out your labels to a label printing company...this will bring the cost of packaging down (and your overall cost per unit) when you earned the right to say there is a proven market for your product.
I give Avery some credit for coming out with some new innovative products for small businesses...they have had to weather the last ten to fifteen years of the big office supply companies gaining market share of the label market by providing knock-off Avery products sold under the Staples, Office Depot or OfficeMax brand name. I think Avery is hopeful that it will be harder and take longer for the office supply companies to outsource these more specialized new product offerings. The big office supply companies have become dependent on selling knock-offs of reputable brands at a lower price to their customer (usually along with slightly inferior quality).
Regardless, Avery is doing a good job providing some inexpensive products to allow small business customers to use their own computers, printers and design capabilities to do their own thing in-house. Their lines of products can be used by large and medium sized businesses (specialized employee products for catered type events), all the way down to your brother-in-law who just made a new home brewed batch of I.P.A.'s and wants labels for them when he brings them to Thanksgiving to give to unsuspecting relatives to test out for drinkability...
Check out the new Avery products for yourself at their website:
http://www.avery.com/avery/en_us/Products/Avery-Customizable-Marketing-Solutions-Main-Page.htm