Ask HN: What do you do with all your unused tech "swag"?

I’ve moved jobs a few times in the last few years, and have accumulated quite a bit of tech…junk

We’re talking too many water bottles, socks that dont fit, luggage tag holders, etc

I’m sure I’m not the only one with the “box of unused tech swag” and throwing it all away feels like a waste.

Has anyone found a good way to put all this to use?

7 points | by charliebwrites 23 hours ago

16 comments

  • runjake 1 hour ago
    I usually give them to my kids.

    For clothing, hats, etc I dedicate them to painting/yard work/etc throwaway clothes. They're usually made of the cheapest fabrics anyway.

  • silentpuck 21 hours ago
    I usually just give it to someone who needs it. It's amazing how even a “useless” item can become useful in the right hands.
  • starkparker 23 hours ago
    No. They are by definition useless.

    When I start at a company, I ask if there's a swag opt-out, and if they don't offer one I lobby for it. When I get swag I didn't request or want, I refuse the package or ship it back.

    I'm happy to accept shirts or hats when I'm in a visibly customer-facing role or for an event, but the rest of the swag is pure and instant waste, and it makes me like the company less. I get why much of it is done the way it's done (minimum order sizes, quantity discounts, contract reqs, as comp bonuses thrown in with customer/event swag orders) but I don't want that shit in my house.

  • austin-cheney 6 hours ago
    Most of my tech swag is backpacks and coffee mugs. I have a closet with a stack of unused backpacks I am not willing to give away. I am still using an Orbitz branded backpack from a decade ago.
  • palata 12 hours ago
    > throwing it all away feels like a waste.

    Swag is waste anyway. If you give it away, the only difference is that somebody else will throw it away (and you may feel better).

  • JohnFen 23 hours ago
    Before I learned my lesson and stopped accepting swag (except t-shirts which are always useful), I had a similar accumulation. Eventually, I just donated it all to the local equivalent of Goodwill.

    I was given a bunch of swag when I started my current job, and just left it in the corner of my cube. When I move on, I'll leave it behind right where it is.

  • sloaken 15 hours ago
    I am selective in what I grab. When I see something, I run through a list of end destinations: My desk, my home, my wife, my kids, neighbor kids. Otherwise pass. Well unless its a bottle of water. But I do like toys I can use to relax my brain at work.
  • al_borland 13 hours ago
    I’ve given some of the water bottles to my nephews. I was never going to use them, and now it looks they get a lot of use. They seem to be their go-to water bottles now.
  • devonnull 19 hours ago
    If I'm not using it, I usually give it away. The only things I've kept from conferences/events that I've attended are a couple of metal water bottles, a flash drive or three, and a bottle opener.
  • 31carmichael 12 hours ago
    Throw it away, and don't collect free things in the future. Pay for things you want or need.
  • getwiththeprog 19 hours ago
    Surely the era of plastic water bottles should come to an end?
  • entrepy123 20 hours ago
    If it's a great swag item from a unicorn that you were at early enough to feel special about, you could frame it and put it up on the wall to look back fondly on.
  • apothegm 23 hours ago
    Buy nothing groups, curb alerts, thrift stores.
  • iExploder 20 hours ago
    what is the point of swag anyway, why do companies waste money on these useless items?
    • JohnFen 19 hours ago
      Because it takes advantage of a well-known human tendency to think more kindly of people who have given you a gift. It's a variation of the truth that your customers will tend to think better of your products if they get something unexpected and free along with the product, even if that thing is of low or no actual value.
      • TristanBall 18 hours ago
        While this true enough, an ironic side effect of my attending a couple of rounds of sales related negotiation training ( compulsory for everyone at that company ), was to really highlight how calculatingly manipulative this is.

        I mean, we kinda all know that anyway, but somehow it reinforced it enough that I know find it actively distasteful.

        Even the classic sales approach of buying coffee or a meal feels creepy know, but I've had to relearn to accept it because it's just so hard to fight every time.

        When I tell people, the normal response is encredulous "but it's free?". It's really really not, the costs just aren't immediately financial.

        (Gifts outside corporate life are generally fine, an actual human wanting to "manipulate" me into liking them more is generally expressing some level of affection. A corporation cannot do that)

        Every know and again I get something funny enough that it gets me anyway.. I'm very fond of my all blue Rubic's cube from ibm for example, and I've got a few unbranded water bottles around the place.

        Anything else I can't politely refuse just gets binned as soon as I can do so without a fuss.

      • iExploder 18 hours ago
        people who don't enjoy clutter and waste must be still outliers then
        • JohnFen 18 hours ago
          It generally works even when the recipient doesn't actually want the thing. It's a manipulation tactic that leverages a couple of aspects of human behavior that allows for societies to function. Sadly.
  • cinntaile 22 hours ago
    Try to sell it on craigslist?
  • Motanachristian 21 hours ago
    [dead]