Prize Wheel — Tiered Rewards Spinner
Manage Items
Add options to include in the wheel.
Current items (3)
Recent Results
Total Spins
0
How to use
- Translate inventory reality into slices—only promise rewards that are pick-ready behind the counter.
- Balance tiers visually so bronze prizes still feel plentiful compared with scarce gold arcs.
- Spin once per participant unless marketing rules explicitly allow replays.
- Log winners via Recent Results snapshots before handing over physical goods.
- Retheme slices between campaigns while preserving baseline fairness settings.
FAQ
What is a prize wheel?
A prize wheel is a promotional lucky wheel where slices describe perks or merchandise tiers; shoppers spin to learn what they unlocked.
Can odds differ per tier?
Yes—duplicate cheap-tier slices or shrink premium arcs to emulate weighted probability while staying visually honest.
Does this integrate with POS?
No ERP hooks—operators manually fulfill prizes based on winning slices.
Is customer data collected?
Not by default; spins execute locally unless your team separately captures emails according to privacy policies.
Prize wheel promotions
A prize wheel injects theater into commerce: foot traffic slows, phones rise to record spins, and participants mentally anchor value to tangible arcs—even when actual SKU cost stays modest.
What is a prize wheel?
Same spinner math as classroom or giveaway variants; differentiation lies in merchandising language—tiers, bundles, upsells—and inventory readiness conversations ops teams hold before flipping the switch.
Because arcs communicate scarcity instantly, marketers duplicate low-cost slices while leaving hero prizes razor-thin without touching code.
Key features
- Tier presets signaling how to narrate gold versus bronze outcomes during booth chatter.
- Rapid slice edits when SKU substitutions ship overnight before an expo opens.
- Recent Results helping finance reconcile promo liability vs actual redemptions.
- Mobile-friendly layout so street teams spin tablets inside cramped booths.
Common use cases
- Retail grand openings trading spins for email signups (handled separately from this tool).
- Employee onboarding kits randomized via perk slices.
- Creator merch drops gamifying limited-edition apparel unlocks.
Best practices
- Stock shelves before promising slices—nothing erodes trust faster than “we ran out.”
- Publish approximate odds if regulators expect transparency for paid entries.
- Train staff to decline rerolls politely unless promotions explicitly allow them.
- Translate multilingual slices carefully when touring internationally.