Not everything makes sense to 3D print for promotional use. Here's what we've learned producing custom objects for events and brand activations.
Custom branded objects are one of those categories where the gap between what sounds good and what actually works is significant. We've produced enough of them to have opinions.
The items that work well as 3D-printed promotional objects tend to share a few characteristics:
Desk accessories are consistently strong. A custom-shaped phone stand, a cable organizer with a logo integrated into the structure, a pen holder with the company name as part of the geometry — these sit on someone's desk for years, not in a drawer after the first week.
Display stands and mounts are another category where 3D printing genuinely wins. If you need a stand that holds your product at a specific angle, with your branding visible from the right sightline, no stock product does that. We print it.
Where 3D printing doesn't make sense for promotional use: anything where volume is the primary goal and finish quality is secondary. If you need 2,000 identical small items and you're not attached to a specific shape, injection-molded or die-cast options will be cheaper and faster.
We'll tell you that directly rather than take the order.
The most interesting projects we've done involved real collaboration:
The iteration cycle is where 3D printing shines — no tooling costs, no minimum orders, and changes between versions cost a day rather than a week.
If you have a concept for a custom branded object and you're not sure if it makes sense to print, send it to us. We'll tell you honestly.