CPG brands including Pringles are using QR codes on packaging to turn static print assets into updatable infrastructure, allowing brands to change promotions, contests, or campaigns without reprinting cans or boxes, per WFMZ.
ReadingThe steal: print a QR code centered on your package front or back. Direct it to a landing page you control. Behind that URL, you can change the offer, the contest, the message, or the funnel daily without touching physical inventory. This is most valuable for seasonal products, limited runs, or promotional brands where you're testing what sticks. Print one can design; run 12 different campaigns. If you're doing any kind of limited drop or contest, the QR code lets you extend shelf life without reprinting. Set the code, print the production run, and optimize the landing page for 90 days.
MY STASH TAKEThis is a small infrastructure shift with outsized payoff. Most brands print their packaging months in advance, lock in a campaign, and pray it works. Pringles inverted the risk: the package is a vessel; the campaign lives online. A small brand should use this immediately if you're doing runs larger than 5,000 units. You can print once, test multiple offers, and measure what resonates without tossing inventory. The QR code also gives you a direct path to data—you know exactly how many scans, clicks, and conversions came from that specific can.
WatchWatch whether retailers begin demanding QR-code-enabled packaging as standard for promotional items.