Mini plastic jars cover a lot of ground in branded confectionery because they work at almost every scale and in almost every context. The jar is small enough to sit at an airline seat, compact enough to fit in a showbag, and affordable enough that ordering for a boutique event of fifty guests doesn't require a large budget. Fills include mini mints, mixed jelly beans, corporate colour jelly beans, mixed chocolate gems, corporate colour chocolate gems, and M&Ms, all at 20g and all Australian Made. The clear plastic construction puts the fill on display through the sides, and the branded sticker goes on the lid where it faces upward on a table or desk. MOQ is 50 units across the whole range. The corporate colour fill options, available in both jelly beans and chocolate gems, let the visible confectionery inside the jar match the brand palette, which turns the jar into a co-ordinated branded piece rather than a generic lolly in a stickered container. Mint-filled jars suit customer-facing organisations where the fill reads as practical and professional. Chocolate gems and jelly beans in brand colours suit advertising agencies, design studios, and any brand where colour is already doing brand work elsewhere.
A hotel launching a new property places branded mini jars of corporate colour jelly beans on each guest room desk at opening. The jar is small enough not to crowd the surface, the fill matches the hotel's branding, and guests who pick it up see the hotel name before they open it.
Corporate colour jelly beans and chocolate gems mean the confectionery through the clear plastic becomes part of the brand presentation, not just the sticker on top.
Buyer Scenarios
What kinds of events are mini jars best suited to?
Trade shows and conferences are the most common context. The jar is compact and the MOQ of 50 makes targeted ordering straightforward. Airline in-flight gifting is another well-established use, where the small size is a practical requirement. Table place settings at corporate dinners and parties are popular because the jar sits neatly beside a place card or napkin without taking up much surface. Hotel rooms and concession stands at sporting events are also noted uses. The jar's versatility comes from its size: it suits almost any setting where a single-serve branded treat makes sense.
Would a school or charity event use mini jars?
Yes, the MOQ of 50 units and the price per unit make mini jars accessible for a school fundraiser or charity event where budget is a real constraint. Jelly beans and chocolate gems are the most popular fills for a children-friendly context. The branded sticker can carry the school crest, charity name, or fundraising campaign message. Selling branded jars at a school fete or charity stall at $2–$3 each generates a margin on top of the unit cost while promoting the organisation.
Are corporate colour fills available for both jelly beans and chocolate gems?
Yes, corporate colour jelly beans and corporate colour chocolate gems are both available in the range. Both start from 50 units. For a brand with a strong single colour, ordering the corporate colour fill in the matching jar makes the whole item, container, fill, and sticker, read as a co-ordinated piece of branded collateral. It's worth specifying the colour at the time of ordering so the fill can be matched before production.
What is the difference between mixed and corporate colour fills?
Mixed fills use an assorted range of colours across the full flavour range, so the jar looks bright and varied. Corporate colour fills use a single colour matched to the brand's palette. The jar looks co-ordinated and intentional. Mixed fills work for general audience giveaways where variety is part of the appeal. Corporate colour fills work for brand-focused campaigns where the visual coherence of the gift matters more than colour variety.