If you are looking for a promotional product that looks great for promoting outdoor and sporting events, plastic water bottles may be the answer. Promotional water bottles are very popular promotional gifts for many different sports. They fit just as nicely onto the drink bottle holder on a bike as they do in a sports bag or back pack. Depending on the size of the promotion, you may wish to colour coordinate the sports bottles with other promotional giveaways such as sweatbands, bags and pens. Sports bottles are available in almost every colour imaginable.
Plastic sports bottles are available in four standard sizes, 250cl, 500cl, 750cl and 1L. Young children usually enjoy the smaller bottles for obvious reasons. The bottles fit nicely into their hands and they don’t need much more to drink. Adults generally prefer the half liter and 1 liter sizes.
If your promotion is focused on healthy eating and drinking, plastic water bottles can help drive your message home. Print something like ‘Drink four of me per day’ on the side and your target audience might just do that. Most people know how important it is to drink plenty of water every day and these easily held and carried bottles are an excellent way to promote that message.
One last note about plastic water bottles, they have large print areas! If you are looking for a product that has enough room for your logo, strapline, address details and web address, the print will look great on a sports bottle. These durable plastic gifts are an inexpensive and poplar promotional product that can be used to target many different business sectors.
Dan Toombs is the Managing Director of CompuGift Limited, the UK’s first internet based promotional gift supplier. The company was established in 1997 and is a leading supplier of promotional business gifts to businesses in the UK and Europe. CompuGift’s website features a large range of promotional sports bottles that can be printed with your logo and details.
Wii Sports (Nintendo Selects)
And Nobody Got Hurt!: The World’s Weirdest, Wackiest True Sports Stories
Sports Illustrated Football’s Greatest