Pringles embedded QR codes on its packaging that link to live promotional campaigns, according to WFMZ. When the brand runs a new contest or needs to update product information, it changes the destination content without touching the physical can. The packaging becomes infrastructure—a static print run that carries dynamic messages for months.
The mechanic: a scannable code printed once that routes to a URL the brand controls. Pringles updates the landing page behind that URL to reflect current promotions, ingredient disclosures, or limited-time offers. A consumer scanning the same can in February sees different content than one scanning in April. No new print job required.
This works because it decouples the message from the medium. Traditional packaging locks copy, legal, and creative into a single production cycle. A regulatory change or a retired claim means scrapping printed stock or selling through obsolete units. Dynamic QR routing lets the brand update compliance language, swap promotional offers, or test new creative on existing inventory. The cost of change drops from thousands in print fees to minutes updating a CMS.
The mechanism also extends promotional windows. A brand can run sequential campaigns on the same package batch: scan in week one for a sweepstakes, week two for a recipe, week three for a loyalty program. Each wave reaches consumers buying the same SKU at different times, compressing more marketing work into a single production run. WFMZ noted this approach reduces waste from obsolete packaging while expanding promotional flexibility.
The steal for a small physical-product brand: print a single QR code on your next packaging run that points to a branded short link you own—Bitly, Rebrandly, or your own domain redirect. Route that link to a simple landing page built in Carrd, Notion, or a Shopify page. Update the destination content as your offer changes.
Concrete sequence: Before your next print run, register a short branded URL (yourname.co/pack) and create a landing page template. Print the QR code linking to that URL on the package. When you launch a new campaign, update the landing page—swap the hero image, change the offer copy, update the CTA button. The QR code on every package in circulation now points to the new campaign. Cost: domain $12/year, Carrd $19/year, 15 minutes per content update.
Start with one use case. If you run seasonal promotions, update the landing page monthly with the current offer. If you're iterating product formulation, post the latest ingredient list and sourcing story. If you're testing retention mechanics, rotate between recipe content, restocking reminders, and loyalty program enrollments. Each package becomes a renewable asset that works harder over its shelf life.
The broader pattern: packaging is no longer a fixed asset with a single message lifespan. Brands that treat it as updateable infrastructure compress more marketing cycles into fewer print runs, reduce obsolescence risk, and gain a direct channel that updates faster than retail shelf talkers or POS displays. The next carton you print can carry six months of campaigns instead of one.
The takeaway
Print one QR code linking to a URL you control, then update the destination content as your campaign changes—no reprints needed.
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