Pringles added QR codes to its packaging that link to contests and campaigns the brand can update without printing new cans, according to WFMZ. The codes give the brand a permanent on-pack doorway to digital offers that change as often as the marketing calendar demands. A consumer scans the same can in February and August and sees completely different promotions.
The move decouples the packaging run from the campaign cycle. Pringles prints one batch of cans with a static QR code, then rotates the landing page content server-side — new sweepstakes, new recipe ideas, new tie-ins — without touching the physical package. Thecan becomes infrastructure instead of a single-use advertisement. WFMZ notes the approach allows CPG brands to deploy time-sensitive campaigns and respond to market conditions without the lead time and cost of reprinting millions of units.
The mechanism works because the QR code points to a URL the brand controls. The package stays the same, but the destination changes. When Pringles wants to promote a new flavor partnership or a limited contest, it updates the landing page and the code on every can in circulation immediately reflects the new offer. The brand extends the useful life of every printed can and eliminates the waste of obsolete packaging that still carries an expired promotion.
This also solves the attribution problem that plagues on-pack promotions. Every scan generates a data point: when, where, which SKU, what the consumer did next. Pringles can see which retailers drive the most scans, which flavors generate engagement, and which offers convert. The QR code turns the package into a trackable media channel with performance metrics that static print never delivered.
A small physical-product brand runs the same play with one Canva-designed sticker and a free Bitly account. Print a static QR code sticker in quantity — 500 stickers cost about $45 from StickerMule — and apply it to every product box. Point the code to a Bitly short link, which forwards to a landing page you control. Use a free Carrd site or a Shopify page. When you want to change the offer, update the landing page. The sticker stays the same, the destination changes, and you track every scan in Bitly's dashboard.
Start with a simple offer: scan for a 15 percent discount code or access to a private product tutorial. After the first campaign runs, swap the landing page to a new contest or a product launch pre-order. The same sticker now promotes different content. Test messaging, rotate seasonal offers, or run flash sales without reprinting anything. The sticker becomes a permanent asset that pays for itself across multiple campaigns instead of a single-use flyer that dies with the first promotion.
The pattern extends beyond cans and boxes. Any physical product with printable surface area can carry a QR code that functions as updatable infrastructure. The brand that prints once and updates continuously wins the speed game and eliminates the reprint tax.