Promotional Custom Bags

Branded Soft Goods Product Design & Development | Google + Promo Bag

studioFAR partnered with Google to design and develop a branded soft goods product for promotional and event use. The project required translating Google’s brand standards into a durable, manufacturable product while maintaining quality, consistency, and scalability across production.

Client: Google
Date: 2015
Services: Promotional Bags

The Problem

Branded promotional products operate under a different set of constraints than traditional consumer products. The product needed to:

  • Accurately reflect Google’s brand standards and quality expectations
  • Be durable enough for repeated use
  • Maintain consistency across production units
  • Balance cost with perceived value
  • Be produced at scale within defined timelines
  • Translate design intent clearly to manufacturing partners

Unlike typical product development, the challenge here was executing at a high level within brand and production constraints.

Our Role

studioFAR led the soft goods design and development, including:

  • Product design aligned with Google’s brand guidelines
  • Construction strategy for durability and consistency
  • Material selection balancing quality and cost
  • Development of manufacturing-ready specifications
  • Oversight of product development for scalable production

The focus was on delivering a product that met both brand expectations and production realities.

Approach

1. Brand Translation into Product

The design needed to reflect Google’s visual and product standards.

We focused on:

  • Clean, minimal construction
  • Material choices aligned with brand perception
  • Subtle detailing rather than over-design

The goal was a product that felt consistent with the brand — not just labeled with it.

2. Material & Cost Strategy

Promotional products require careful cost control without compromising quality.

We developed:

  • Material selections that balanced durability and price
  • Construction methods aligned with production efficiency
  • Decisions that maintained perceived value at scale

Approach

3. Construction & Consistency

Consistency across units was critical.

We designed:

  • Clear construction specifications
  • Repeatable assembly methods
  • Controlled detailing to reduce variation

This ensured the final product matched expectations across production runs.

4. Design for Manufacturing (DFM)

The product was developed with manufacturing in mind from the start.

This included:

  • Aligning with factory capabilities
  • Reducing unnecessary complexity
  • Creating clear documentation for production

The goal was reliable execution at volume.

Where Most Teams Get This Wrong

Branded soft goods products often fail due to:

  • Over-designed concepts that don’t translate to production
  • Poor material choices that reduce perceived value
  • Inconsistent quality across units
  • Misalignment between brand expectations and manufacturing realities

These issues are especially visible when working with high-profile brands.

Outcome

The Google + Promo Bag delivered:

  • A clean, brand-aligned soft goods product
  • Durable construction suitable for repeated use
  • Consistent quality across production
  • A scalable manufacturing solution