Pringles is running rotating contests and promotions through a single QR code printed on millions of cans, according to WFMZ. The code never changes. The destination does. When a shopper scans the can in January, they see a Super Bowl giveaway. In March, the same code on the same can redirects to a product education page. Pringles avoids reprinting packaging every time the marketing calendar turns. The infrastructure is the QR code. The campaign is the link behind it.
The mechanic is straightforward. Brands generate a static QR code that encodes a short URL they control. That URL resolves to a redirect server. The brand updates the destination without touching the code or the package. The printed asset becomes a persistent channel. WFMZ reports that CPG brands are using this to run contests, deliver recipe content, and swap out compliance disclosures as regulations shift. The cost of packaging design and plate production can exceed $50,000 for a mid-volume SKU. Dynamic QR codes eliminate that expense for every subsequent campaign.
It works because the package stops being a static billboard and starts behaving like a digital endpoint. A shopper who scans in-store is self-selecting for engagement. The brand captures that intent and routes it to the highest-value offer at that moment. If a product recall happens, the redirect updates in minutes. If a seasonal campaign ends, the code switches to evergreen content. The packaging itself never expires. The message does.
The mechanism is differentiation by latency. A physical package has a six-to-twelve-month lead time from design to shelf. A redirect link updates in seconds. Brands that layer dynamic infrastructure onto physical goods gain the flexibility of digital media without sacrificing the durability of print. The QR code becomes a publishing platform with a print run of one.
A small brand steals this play with a free dynamic QR service and a spreadsheet. Generate a QR code through a tool that allows link editing after the code is printed. Print that code on your packaging, your product insert, or a sticker on the box. Map the destination to a simple landing page—Google Doc, Notion page, Carrd site. Update the page when the campaign changes. Track scans with UTM parameters appended to the destination URL. If you run a product sampler box, the QR code on the January box can point to a Valentine's upsell offer. The February box with the same QR code points to a spring refresh. You printed the code once. You changed the campaign four times.
Cost: $0 if you use a free-tier QR generator with redirect capability. $10-$30/month if you want analytics and custom short domains. The same play scales to compliance. If a state updates labeling requirements, update the QR destination to include the new disclosure. The physical package stays compliant without a reprint. The brand avoids both the cost and the inventory write-off of obsolete packaging.
The broader pattern is treating physical goods as endpoints in a digital system. The package is not the message. It is the address. Brands that build updatable infrastructure into their packaging decouple the production cycle from the campaign cycle. They ship once and iterate forever.