Corporate Gifting & Brand Merchandising Request Form

Client & Project Overview

Company Name

Primary Contact Person

Email

Phone Number

Project Name/Event: (e.g., "Annual Tech Summit" or "Client Onboarding")

Requested Delivery Date

Gifting Purpose & Audience

Goal of the Gift

Recipient Profile: (e.g., High-level executives, Gen-Z tech employees, etc.)

Estimated Quantity

Merchandising Categories

Apparel

Drinkware

Tech Accessories

Office/Stationery

Lifestyle/Wellness

Branding & Customization

Logo Application

Brand Guidelines: Do you have a specific Hex code or CMYK palette we must follow?

HEX Codes

CMYK/Pantone

Does this order require individual recipient names?

Please upload a file with the name list.

Choose a file or drop it here
 

Packaging & Presentation

Packaging Level

Inclusions

Budget & Logistics

Total Project Budget: (Including shipping and taxes)

Target Price per Unit

Shipping Method

Form Template Insights

Please remove this client intake form insights section before publishing.

Overall Form Strengths

Here is a breakdown of the strategic insights for your form sections:

1. The Logistics Filter (Section 1 & 6)

Small businesses often struggle with Timeline Creep. By asking for the "Requested Delivery Date" immediately, you establish expectations.

  • The Insight: Production usually takes two weeks, but shipping and "kitting" (the act of putting items into boxes) can add another 10 days.
  • The Goal: You want to identify if a project is a "rush order" before you even look at the product options.

2. Defining the Recipient (Section 2)

Gifting is an extension of brand voice. A gift for a long-term partner should feel different than a "swag bag" for a college recruit.

  • The Insight: High-level executives often prefer "quiet branding" (small, tonal logos), whereas brand advocates or fans might want bold, high-visibility designs.
  • The Goal: Matching the item's utility to the recipient's lifestyle ensures the gift isn't thrown away.

3. Product Selection vs. Application (Section 3 & 4)

The "Product Category" tells you what they want, but the "Branding Method" tells you how much it will cost.

  • The Insight: Certain methods have higher setup costs. For example, embroidery requires a "digitizing" fee, whereas screen printing requires "screens" for every color used.
  • The Goal: This section helps you steer the client toward the most cost-effective decoration method for their specific quantity.

4. The Power of Presentation (Section 5)

The "unboxing experience" is where most of the brand value is created. If a premium watch arrives in a bubble mailer, the perceived value drops instantly.

  • The Insight: Packaging is often an afterthought, but it can account for 15-25% of the total cost.
  • The Goal: Deciding on packaging early prevents budget overages at the end of the project.


Mandatory Questions Recommendation

Please remove this mandatory questions recommendation before publishing.

Mandatory Fields Analysis

Here are the essential questions for your template and the operational reasoning behind them:

1. Requested Delivery Date

Why it’s mandatory: This is the "anchor" for the entire project. In the world of custom merchandise, the calendar dictates the possibilities.

  • Operational Insight: Without a firm date, you cannot verify stock availability or production slots. If a client needs 500 branded jackets in ten days, your catalog of options shrinks by 90%. Setting this as mandatory prevents you from quoting items that cannot physically arrive in time.

2. Estimated Quantity

Why it’s mandatory: In branding and manufacturing, volume dictates price. * Operational Insight: Unit costs for 50 items versus 5,000 items are drastically different due to "setup fees" (the cost to calibrate a machine or create a screen for printing). You cannot provide an accurate quote without knowing the scale of the order. This question also helps you determine if the project meets your minimum order requirements (MOQs).

3. Total Project Budget (or Target Price per Unit)

Why it’s mandatory: This prevents "scope creep" and ensures your recommendations are realistic.

  • Operational Insight: There is a vast difference between a $15 "token of appreciation" and a $150 "executive gift." Forcing a budget range allows you to curate a selection that fits the client's financial boundaries immediately, saving hours of back-and-forth on items they cannot afford.

4. Logo / Artwork Format (High-Resolution Vector)

Why it’s mandatory: Visual branding is the core of the service.

  • Operational Insight: Most professional printing and embroidery machines require Vector files (usually ending in .AI, .EPS, or .PDF). If a client only provides a grainy web image (.JPG or .PNG), the final product will look unprofessional. Making this a mandatory upload or confirmation ensures you have the "blueprints" needed to start production without delays.

5. Shipping & Distribution Method

Why it’s mandatory: Shipping is often the most overlooked cost in a merchandising project.

  • Operational Insight: You need to know if you are shipping 200 boxes to one warehouse or 200 individual boxes to 200 different home addresses. Individual "drop-shipping" requires significantly more labor, specialized software for address validation, and much higher postage costs. Knowing this upfront is vital for an accurate final invoice.


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