PepsiCo, Coca-Cola, and Keurig Dr Pepper are embedding QR codes into product packaging across their soda lines, according to NBC News. The codes turn static aluminum into programmable real estate. Once printed, the can becomes a gateway to promotions, product information, and commerce flows the brand can change daily without touching the print run.
The mechanics are simple: the QR code sits on the label or shrink sleeve, consumer scans, brand controls the destination. No app required. The code routes to a URL the brand owns, and that URL can serve different content depending on date, geography, or campaign calendar. A 12-ounce Coke can printed in March carries a code that promotes a summer sweepstakes in June, a product launch in September, and a holiday bundle in December. Same can, three campaigns, zero reprint cost.
This works because the QR code decouples the message from the package. Traditional packaging locks in the creative at press time. Any change requires new plates, new inventory, and disposal of obsolete stock. With QR infrastructure, the physical package becomes a pointer, and the brand updates the destination in a CMS. The three soda giants are not running a test — they are redesigning core SKU packaging, which means they expect the scan rate to justify the tooling cost and the complexity of managing dynamic landing pages at scale.
The underlying mechanism is post-purchase engagement without requiring the consumer to remember a URL or download an app. The can is already in hand. The friction to scan is lower than typing a web address, and the brand captures the scan event: timestamp, location if permitted, device type. That data feeds attribution models and informs regional promotional spend. A grocery chain in Ohio sees higher scan rates on Diet Pepsi than regular Pepsi, and the brand adjusts the next wave of retailer co-op dollars accordingly.
For a small physical-product brand, the steal is to treat packaging as the entry point to a owned-media loop, not a one-time messaging surface. Print a QR code on the box, bag, or bottle. Route it to a simple landing page on your domain — not a third-party link shortener, because you want to own the redirect and the analytics. On that page, offer one clear next action: join the email list for a 10 percent repeat-purchase coupon, watch a 90-second product demo, or unlock a limited product drop. Update the page content every month without reprinting a single unit.
Cost line: QR code generation is free. A Shopify or WordPress landing page costs nothing if you already have the domain. If you are printing new packaging anyway, the QR code is an additional vector file in the print file — no incremental charge from most commercial printers. The only new expense is the time to build and maintain the landing page, which is under two hours per month if you use a page builder. Test the code with your phone before the print run locks. Make sure it works in low-light retail environments and on curved surfaces if you are printing on a can or bottle.
The broader pattern here is that the largest CPG brands are moving toward packaging as infrastructure, not decoration. The can becomes a persistent customer acquisition channel, and every case shipped is also a media buy. A small brand cannot match their production volume, but it can adopt the same redirect logic at one-tenth the overhead. Print the code once, update the offer weekly, and measure scan-to-conversion in your analytics dashboard. The package stops being a sunk cost and starts being a distribution channel you control.
The takeaway
QR codes let you update packaging messaging after print, turning each unit into a channel you control and measure.
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