Improving your swag strategy doesn’t require a bigger budget. It requires better decisions.
Look at what’s been ordered, distributed, and used.
What’s still around? What disappeared quickly? What never left the box?
Data doesn’t lie — and it’s a great starting point.
The best swag earns its place in someone’s routine.
If an item doesn’t integrate into real life, it won’t deliver value — no matter how creative it is.
Choice doesn’t have to be complex.
Even small options — size, color, category — increase perceived value and reduce waste.
Because appreciation feels better when it respects individuality.
The strongest swag strategies don’t feel flashy.
They feel intentional, supportive, and easy to sustain.
That’s what makes them work.