Cheap swag looks like savings on a spreadsheet.

In real life, it becomes reprints, complaints, and brand damage—especially when your logo is on it. Because once your logo is printed, it’s not just a product anymore. It’s a walking brand review.

Where “cheap” becomes expensive

  • Reprints and replacements
    Low-quality items fail faster. Then you’re paying twice:
    once for the order and again to fix the embarrassment
  • Low adoption (aka: the Trash Can Test)
    If people don’t use it, you didn’t buy swag. You bought clutter.
  • Support time + coordination cost
    Chasing sizes, fixing print issues, handling “my bottle leaks” messages—your internal time has a cost too.
  • Brand damage (the silent one)
    A bad hoodie isn’t just a bad hoodie.
    It’s “your brand doesn’t care about details.”

What to do instead (without blowing the budget)

  • Choose fewer items, better quality.
  • A small kit that gets used beats a big kit that gets ignored.
  • Spend where it shows.

If budget is tight, prioritize:

  • Fabric comfort (for apparel).
  • Print durability.
  • Packaging basics (so it doesn’t arrive looking sad).

Match quality to use case.

  • Event giveaway? Go practical and simple.
  • Onboarding kit? Go re-wearable and durable.
  • Leadership gifting? Go premium and minimal.

The best procurement question.

Instead of “what’s the cheapest option?”, ask: “What’s the lowest cost option that still protects our brand?”

In a nutshell.

Cheap stuff is expensive—because your logo makes it permanent.

Quick rule:
Bell Bell

If it won’t survive real use, it’s not “cost-effective”—it’s brand tax.