Pringles and other CPG brands have embedded QR codes directly into package design, converting every printed can and box into updatable marketing infrastructure that eliminates the need for reprints when campaigns change, according to WFMZ.
The mechanism is straightforward: the QR code printed on the package remains constant across production runs, but the URL it resolves to can be changed at will. When Pringles wants to shift from a sweepstakes to a recipe portal or a partnership activation, the team updates the landing page without touching a single can already on shelf. The packaging stays in play. The campaign changes underneath it.
This works because the QR code encodes a permanent redirect URL controlled by the brand. That redirect can point to any destination the marketing team chooses, swapped out in minutes through a content management system. A can printed in Q1 can promote a summer contest in June and a holiday bundle in November, all from the same printed code. The brand decouples the physical asset from the campaign calendar.
The alternative is the traditional print model: design a package, lock the promotion, print tens of thousands of units, distribute, and live with that creative until the inventory cycles out. If the promotion underperforms or a partnership falls through, the brand either eats the cost of obsolete packaging or runs a dead campaign. With a static QR infrastructure, the brand updates the destination and the next scan reflects the new strategy. No write-off. No lag.
For a smaller physical-product brand, the same play scales down cleanly. Print a single QR code on your mailer box, hang tag, or instruction card. Register a short branded domain you control and set up a simple redirect using a free service like Rebrandly or a paid tool like Bitly. The QR code stays the same forever. The redirect target changes whenever you need it to.
Run this sequence: before your first print run, generate one QR code that points to yourbrand.com/go or go.yourbrand.com. Print that code on every package, every run. When you launch, point the redirect at your welcome offer. Two months later, point it at a referral program. Four months later, point it at a limited release. The customer scans the same code. The experience changes. Your packaging never reprints.
Cost to execute this is negligible. Domain registration runs about $12 per year. Redirect management through Rebrandly is free for up to 500 clicks per month, or $29 per month for higher volume. QR code generation is free. The only expense is ensuring the code prints clearly at the size required for reliable scanning, typically a minimum of 1 inch square. If you are already printing packaging, the incremental cost is zero.
The broader pattern here is turning static print into dynamic infrastructure. The package becomes the durable layer. The campaign becomes the flexible layer. Pringles can test, iterate, and respond to market conditions without waiting for the next print cycle. A one-person brand can do the same with a $12 domain and a redirect.
The takeaway
Print one QR code on all packaging, control the redirect, change campaigns without reprinting a single unit.
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