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Pill Bottles
Choosing a pill bottle over a pillow box or cello bag is a decision about what happens when someone picks it up. A cello bag gets opened and eaten. A pill bottle gets picked up, read, shown to the person next to them, laughed at, pocketed, and later placed on a desk where it stays for the rest of the week. The novelty of the container, a clear plastic bottle shaped like a medicine bottle, branded with a sticker that replicates a prescription label. That label is what drives the chain of behaviour. The range offers small bottles at 16–17g in jelly beans, mini mints, corporate colour jelly beans, chocolate beans, and M&Ms, and larger pill jar dispensers at 120g in choc beans or M&Ms. All items are Australian Made and start from 100 units. Small bottles are the conference table and delegate bag format. Dispensers suit the desk or counter where a self-serve supply over the course of a day makes sense. The sticker on both sizes carries the brand identity in a layout that intentionally echoes a real prescription label. The closer the label design gets to the real thing, the harder the gag lands.
A marketing agency running a campaign for a private health brand orders branded pill bottles for the launch event. Guests pick them up, read the mock label, and spend genuine time connecting the brand with the joke.
Corporate colour jelly beans in the small bottle let the fill visible through the clear plastic match the brand's colour, turning the whole item into a more co-ordinated branded piece than a mixed-colour fill.
Product Knowledge
What fills are available in the small bottles?
Small bottles at 16–17g hold mixed jelly beans, corporate colour jelly beans, mini mints, mixed chocolate beans, or M&Ms. Corporate colour jelly beans replace the mixed fill with jelly beans in a single brand colour, which is visible through the clear bottle. The M&Ms version brings a recognised consumer brand into the giveaway. Mints and chocolate beans cover the palate-cleansing and chocolate preference options.
What is the difference between a small bottle and a pill jar dispenser?
Small bottles hold 16–17g and are designed for single-use distribution. One bottle per person at a conference table, in a delegate bag, or on an event seat. Pill jar dispensers hold 120g and are designed to be placed on a desk, counter, or table for self-serve access over the course of an event or meeting. The dispenser is closer in function to a desk bowl than a takeaway item. Both use the same sticker branding approach and the same mock-label aesthetic.
Which industries order pill bottles most?
Medical conferences, pharmaceutical companies, and health insurance firms are the most obvious context. The container shape is directly relevant to the industry and the gag lands with professionals who work with real pill bottles. Beyond healthcare, the novelty works for any brand that wants a conversation-starting giveaway. Conference organisers, marketing agencies, theme parks, and hotel operators are all noted uses in the range. Charity fundraisers use them for novelty sales at events.
Can the sticker design include mock dosage or usage instructions?
Yes, the sticker can be designed to include mock dosage, usage instructions, active ingredients (such as "Active ingredient: 100% fun"), and any other prescription-style copy the buyer wants. This is the most commonly requested approach and the one that gets the most engagement from those who receive them. The buyer supplies the copy or works with the design team to develop it. A proof is produced before production begins.

