By Amanda Hofman, Chief Swag Officer and Branded Merchandise Expert
I hit play on K-Pop Demon Hunters already rolling my eyes, convinced I’d hate it.
It was ridiculous…
…and I loved it. 🤣
(Especially the popcorn eyes. IYKYK.)
No A-list actors. No massive ad budget. Just three demon-hunting K-pop stars—and a fandom that turned it into Netflix’s most-watched English-language movie ever. 😱

A Masterclass in Pull Marketing
Here’s why this campy, chaotic movie blew up: the fans did the heavy lifting.
- Fans made the memes
- Fans moved the merch (yes, there’s ramen and Funko dolls)
- Fans turned a weird little movie into a global moment
That’s not push marketing—it’s pure pull.
The Lesson for Your Swag Strategy
Here’s the takeaway: let your merch feel like fan art.
The best branded merchandise isn’t about what you want to say.
It’s about what your fans, customers, or employees already love.
When swag taps into a belief, a joke, or a vibe your people already share, magic happens.
They’ll:
- Wear it proudly
- Gift it to friends
- Hoard it like a collectible
Not because it’s branded… but because it feels like theirs.
Why This Works
Most corporate swag fails because it’s designed around the company, not the community.
But when branded merch channels the energy of fan culture, it becomes:
- Shareable → People want to post it, not hide it
- Relatable → It reflects their identity, not just your logo
- Sticky → It lives on far beyond the trade show or launch party
This is how you turn swag from throwaway giveaways into lasting brand touchpoints.
Final Thought
So, have you watched K-Pop Demon Hunters yet?
Or are you still wrapping your head around the idea of a demon-fighting K-pop girl group? 👀
Because if it can turn ramen and Funko dolls into fandom gold, imagine what the right branded merch strategy could do for your business.
👉 Want help creating swag that feels like fan art instead of a forced promo? At Go To Market – Anti-Boring Branded Merchandise, we design merch your people actually want to wear, use, and share.