Corporate gifting is a category where good intentions and poor execution are endemic. The budget exists. The intent — to express appreciation, strengthen a relationship, mark a milestone — is genuine. But the product ends up being a branded pen set or a stress ball or a box of chocolates with a sticker on it, and the relationship impact is close to zero.
The gifts that actually work share one characteristic: they're things people genuinely use, chosen with enough care that the recipient understands effort went into the selection. Here's how to think about corporate gifting so your brand leaves the right impression.
The retention test
Before committing to any gift, apply the retention test: will the recipient be using or displaying this item in six months? If the honest answer is no, it's the wrong product.
Products that fail the retention test do so because they solve no problem in the recipient's life. They're not useful, not particularly beautiful, and not sufficiently personalised to carry emotional weight. They're an object with a logo on it, and that's how they're experienced.
Products that pass the retention test are useful every day (quality drinkware, a leather notebook), enjoyable to use (a quality pen, a well-made bag), or sufficiently personal that they carry a story (something specific to the recipient's known interests or context).
The products that consistently work
Quality insulated drinkware: A well-specified insulated water bottle or travel mug sits on desks, appears in meeting rooms, and travels with the recipient. Laser-engraved branding on a brushed stainless product looks genuinely premium and is used multiple times a day. This is one of the highest-retention corporate gift products available in the Australian market.
Leather goods: A quality leather notebook cover, cardholder, or portfolio with a laser-engraved logo is a product people carry with them for years. The tactile quality of good leather signals investment in a way that almost no other promotional substrate does. Price point: $50–$150 depending on the product and quality of leather.
Premium apparel: A well-specified branded tee, cap, or hoodie on a quality blank is kept and worn — unlike its cheaper promotional equivalent. The key is quality of blank and restraint in decoration. A logo that's tastefully placed rather than aggressively branded is something people will wear in their own time. One that shouts corporate branding from every surface is relegated to the back of a drawer.
Quality notebooks: A hardcover A5 notebook with a quality lay-flat binding and a debossed logo is something professional people use. It sits on desks for months, appears in every meeting the recipient attends, and generates repeated impressions without being aggressive about it.
Food and beverage (with a caveat): Quality local food products — artisan chocolate, specialty coffee, premium condiments — are genuinely appreciated and consumed. The branding impact is limited (the packaging is disposed of) but the relationship impact can be high if the product is genuinely good. Pair a quality food gift with a branded drinkware item and you combine immediate enjoyment with lasting brand presence.
Personalisation lifts everything
The same product at the same quality level generates a significantly stronger relationship impact when it's personalised. A laser-engraved water bottle with the recipient's name on it is a different experience to the same bottle with just your company logo. A notebook with the recipient's initials debossed alongside your brand mark is remembered differently to one with your logo alone.
Personalisation requires more lead time and more coordination (you need correct names, correct spellings, correct titles) but the relationship return on that effort is real. For important client gifts, key account management, and executive relationships, personalisation is worth the effort.
Presentation matters
How a gift is presented affects how it's received. A quality product in generic bubble wrap and a plain box lands differently to the same product in tissue paper in a branded box with a handwritten note.
The note is probably the most underinvested element in corporate gifting. A specific, genuine sentence or two — referencing something about the relationship, the project, or the occasion — converts a transaction into a moment. It takes two minutes to write and it's remembered disproportionately to the effort involved.
Building a corporate gifting programme that actually works? Subscribe to Branded — Printwear's weekly newsletter for business owners, marketing managers, and operations leads across Australia and New Zealand.