Pringles embedded dynamic QR codes on its cans that point to digital content the brand can update in real time, according to WFMZ. When the promotion or contest changes, Pringles redirects the QR code to new landing pages without reprinting a single can. The infrastructure decouples the physical package from the marketing calendar.
The move eliminates the lead time and cost of packaging reprints. A typical CPG reprint run for a promotional SKU carries $50,000 to $100,000 in plate changes, minimum print quantities, and disposal of obsolete stock, according to packaging industry norms. Pringles now runs the same can through multiple campaign cycles by changing the destination URL behind the QR code. The can becomes a persistent access point instead of a single-use promotional vehicle.
The mechanism works because the QR code itself is static — the printed image never changes — but the URL it encodes redirects to wherever the brand points it. A consumer scanning the code in March sees a sweepstakes landing page. In June, the same code on the same can takes them to a new product demo or loyalty signup. The brand controls the experience server-side. No new print run, no SKU proliferation, no retailer confusion over which version is current.
This unbundles packaging from promotion velocity. Brands that once planned six months ahead to lock in a printed offer can now test, learn, and pivot messaging while the same cans sit on shelf. The cost savings stack: fewer SKUs to manage, lower inventory write-offs, faster speed to market for new campaigns. The QR code becomes infrastructure — stable on the outside, flexible behind it.
For a small physical-product brand, the play runs on a $200 budget. Print a static QR code on your packaging that links to a branded short URL you control. Use a free redirect service like Bitly or Rebrandly, or a $10/month tool like Short.io that supports custom domains. The short URL becomes your control panel: change the destination any time without touching the package. Launch with a simple landing page — a Carrd site for $19/year or a ConvertKit page if you already pay for email. When the first campaign ends, redirect the QR code to the next offer. The package stays live. One print run serves four promotions.
Set the redirect once, then change only the landing page content. Month one: early-bird discount for a new SKU. Month two: referral program. Month three: user-generated content contest. Month four: email signup for a product drop. The consumer scans the same code on the same jar, but the experience evolves. Test headlines, offers, and creative without waiting for the next print cycle. Track scan volume in your redirect dashboard to see which batches or regions engage most. If a retailer asks whether the code is current, the answer is always yes — you control what current means.
The pattern extends beyond promotions. Use the QR code for product registration, warranty activation, reorder links, recipe content, or sustainability storytelling that updates as your supply chain improves. The package becomes a live channel. Brands that treat packaging as static leave money on the shelf every time they retire a campaign but the cans keep selling.
The takeaway
Print one QR code, redirect the destination as campaigns change — the package stays current without a reprint.
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