Merch with a mission: How SMBs can turn apparel into brand advocacy
For small businesses, branded merchandise can be the difference between being noticed and remembered.
Walk into any local café, brewery or worksite and you’ll see it: the logoed aprons, embroidered caps, crisp branded t-shirts. They’re more than uniforms – they project confidence, belonging, and belief.
One of the tribe
For many small business owners, branded merchandise represents something far more impactful than simple decoration
It represents the moment when a venture starts to feel real. New research from VistaPrint reveals that 74 per cent of Australian small and medium businesses (SMBs) say branded merchandise makes them feel like a ‘real business’, yet more than half (55 per cent) still aren’t using it. That’s a missed opportunity – done well, merch can transform not just how a business looks, but how it grows.
For entrepreneurs, seeing their brand name on a shirt or cap can be deeply validating. In fact, 69 per cent of SMBs say branded apparel signals they’ve “made it,” while 80 per cent of people view businesses with branded clothing as more professional.
It’s easy to see why. Psychology tells us that physicality reinforces identity. Just as a prototype makes a product real, being able to touch and wear your brand makes your business tangible – something people can recognise and trust.
Science backs it up
Research from Queensland University of Technology’s 2024 Trust Trend Report found that visibility and perceived professionalism are critical trust signals in the Australian marketplace – factors that directly influence whether customers choose to engage with or return to a business.
When a business looks credible, customers are more likely to believe in its capability and consistency. Branded apparel delivers that signal instantly. It tells customers you’re established and proud to stand behind your name. And for your team, it creates unity –a shared sense that you’re part of something bigger.
A new type of merch
We’re also seeing the rise of what I call “micro-brand merch” cafés selling their own tees, breweries launching limited-edition apparel, gyms designing gear their members actually want to wear. It reflects a broader shift in how people see local brands.
According to Roy Morgan research, 73 per cent of Australians say they’re willing to buy more Australian-made products, showing a growing appetite for local, values-driven merchandise that connects people to the brands and communities they love.
In a world where digital ads are ignored or blocked, apparel delivers something digital can’t – authentic visibility. It’s not pushed at people; it’s chosen by them. When someone decides to wear your logo, they’re choosing to represent your story.
That’s advocacy in its most organic form.
Wearing business pride
According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, micro and self-employed businesses now account for around 62 per cent of all Australian enterprises – a reminder that affordability, scalability and simplicity aren’t luxuries; they’re essentials.
And this is what drives us: empowering small businesses with the same design confidence and creative tools once reserved for big brands. Credibility shouldn’t belong only to those with the biggest budgets.
Merchandise has always had the power to build awareness, but now, it’s building belonging. When a business puts its name on something – a shirt, a cap, an apron – it’s turning pride into something people can hold. It’s a small gesture that can echo through teams, customers, and communities.
For small businesses, that belief is everything.
Because when your people wear your brand, they’re not just advertising you – they’re advocating for you. And that’s what turns a logo into loyalty.
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James McPhie is Category Director at VistaPrint Australia, where he has
been leading product strategy and innovation for 2.5 years. In his role,
he oversees the full spectrum of Fulfiller management, Pricing Strategy,
Product and Category management, from concept development and
portfolio planning to performance optimisation and go-to-market
execution. James is responsible for ensuring VistaPrint’s product range
meets customer needs while driving growth and delivering exceptional
user experiences for Australian, New Zealand and Singapore customers
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