Every year, a marketer somewhere gets another generic mug.
It’s not that we don’t appreciate it. We do. But if you really want to light up your favorite marketer — especially the ones working in casinos, juggling promotions, player development, events, hosts, and analytics — some gifts can genuinely change their day-to-day lives.
When I first wrote this guide, my goal was simple: Help the people who love marketers (and the leaders who manage them) choose gifts that feel thoughtful, useful, and a little bit magical.
Since I first wrote this, the world of marketing—and casino marketing in particular—has changed dramatically. We’re juggling AI that’s actually useful now, new channels that pop up faster than we can staff them, privacy rules that keep shifting, and a constant parade of promotions, campaigns, and events. The tools have gotten better. The pressure hasn’t eased up.
So it felt like time for a complete refresh, with gifts that match what marketers actually need right now.
And yes, one of the best suggestions I received this year was still:
“A new office chair with a heated massage overlay.”
So we’re starting there.
Marketers spend a lot of time in their chairs—strategy meetings, Zoom calls, comp reviews, creative reviews, budget meetings— often in a chair that should have been retired five years ago.
Build their dream chair setup:
Why it’s a standout gift
This isn’t just a chair. It’s a daily reminder that their comfort and health matter just as much as the numbers on the spreadsheet. It says, “I see how hard you’re working, and I want you to be comfortable while you carry the whole marketing calendar on your back.”
Perfect for:
Casino marketing is a 24/7 world. The lights don’t dim, the promotions don’t stop, and the deadlines don’t magically disappear.
A Wellness & Desk Zen Toolkit says, “I see how hard you work — and I want you to last.”
What to include:
This isn’t about turning their office into a spa. It’s about giving them micro-moments of calm in between chaotic days—a small reset button they can press without leaving their desk.
AI has moved from “interesting experiment” to “daily essential” for marketers. But many still don’t have the budget to explore beyond the free tier or whatever corporate locked them into.
Consider gifting an “AI Sidekick” bundle:
This gift is really about time, confidence, and creative firepower. You’re giving them a partner that helps them battle blank-page syndrome, build testable ideas faster, and feel more prepared for the future rather than anxious about it.
We started with Canva years ago, paying for images one at a time. Upgrading to a Pro-level subscription and collaborating as a team changed everything: templates, stock, Magic tools, resizing, and AI-powered brainstorming became everyday essentials that let us move at the speed our business actually operates.
But great content isn’t just about how it looks—it’s also about how it reads. Clear, compelling writing is still a marketer’s unfair advantage, whether they’re writing offers, emails, scripts, strategy decks, or the hundredth version of “why guests should visit us this weekend.”
A complete content creation toolkit today might include:
For visual content:
For written content:
This doesn’t replace a talented designer or a gifted copywriter. It gives marketers a way to move faster on everyday assets, keep brands more consistent, and “translate” big ideas into visuals and words quickly—especially in lean teams where “marketing” is also “design,” “social,” “events,” and “probably website updates too.”
Instead of just “fixing typos” or “making things pretty,” these tools help marketers communicate more confidently—with leadership, with guests, and with their teams. The voice and vision are still theirs. The tools just help them get there faster.
Books remain one of the most powerful, personal gifts you can give a marketer. They’re portable, they don’t require a login, and they sit on desks as reminders that someone believes in their growth—not just their output.
Instead of grabbing a random title from an airport bookstore, put together a curated stack with a theme and a story behind it. For example:
Customer experience & loyalty:
Writing & content:
Leadership and team culture:
Casino- or hospitality-focused:
Industry memoirs, leadership stories, or books on reinvention and resilience
Or build your own combination—a title that sharpens their thinking about customer experience, something that deepens their understanding of superfans and loyalty, a book that challenges how they see brand building and differentiation, and one that speaks to leadership and culture (essential for marketers who manage others or work cross-departmentally in casinos).
Here’s what makes this gift land:
Slip a short note inside each book:
It turns pages into encouragement. It transforms “a book” into something much more personal—proof that you see not just what they do, but who they’re becoming.
Gift Idea #6: Learning & Certification Fund
Marketing doesn’t sit still, and neither can marketers. GA4, AI, new ad platforms, changing privacy rules — it’s a constant cycle of upgrades.
Yet courses, certifications, and deeper learning often get deprioritized in the budget.
That’s what makes a Learning & Certification Fund an exceptional gift.
Potential inclusions:
Add a touch of structure:
You’re not just handing them a login. You’re investing in their future.
Professional events are more than name badges and cocktail receptions—they’re where many marketers finally get to:
Great options include:
If you lead a team, gifting conference attendance says: “I believe in you, I trust you to represent us well, and I want you in rooms where you’ll grow.” That message lands harder than any plaque.
Sometimes the best gift is a seat in the right room.
Marketers spend their careers building brands and often neglect their own. Their LinkedIn photo is from 2017. Their bio still says “passionate about marketing” because they haven’t had time to write something better.
This is especially meaningful for marketers who are:
Most marketers I talk to say the same thing:
“I just need one quiet day to think and get ahead. Just one day without Slack, without someone needing something right now, without back-to-back meetings.”
Give it to them.
Create a Deep Work Day:
You can even name it: “Strategy Spa Day”—time set aside purely for planning, thinking, writing, and designing the future instead of reacting to the present. For high-output marketers drowning in urgency, this might be the most valuable gift on the list.
You can even tuck in:
What you’re really giving them is mental space — and that’s where the best strategies are born.
Some marketers create content because it’s in their job description. Others create content because they genuinely love it—they’re the ones building a personal brand on LinkedIn, running a side blog or newsletter, documenting their travels, or just obsessed with capturing moments in ways that feel authentic and beautiful.
If you know a marketer who lights up when they talk about storytelling, who has strong opinions about lighting and composition, who’s always thinking “this would make great content”—this kit is for them.
Pack a travel content kit:
This makes it easy for them to capture:
This gift says: “I see that creating content isn’t just your job—it’s part of how you make sense of the world. And I want you to be able to do it well, wherever you are.”
Sometimes, the best gift isn’t for one marketer—it’s for the entire team that has been running on adrenaline, caffeine, and sheer willpower all year.
Think experiences that let them connect as humans, not just coworkers:
This is a fantastic option for leaders who want to show appreciation for hard work on big campaigns, grand openings, rebrands, system conversions, or just surviving another year of “doing more with less.”
It says: “You matter to me, not just as employees, but as people.”
Subscription boxes used to feel like a trend. They’ve matured into a great way to send your marketer a small, recurring reminder that you see them—not just once, but month after month.
Depending on their personality, consider:
These are best when they’re clearly tailored: “I know you live on cold brew during month-end reporting, so I picked this for you” lands way better than “I got you a generic subscription.”
That’s twelve solid gift ideas—plenty to choose from, plenty to mix and match. But I’m from New Orleans, and down here, we believe in lagniappe: that little something extra you weren’t expecting, the bonus gift that shows someone was thinking about you even after they’d already done enough.
So here’s your thirteenth idea, just because.
Some of the most potent gifts don’t always arrive in a box.
Some of the most meaningful gifts I hear marketers talk about are:
You can:
For marketers who often feel like they’re “the only one” in their role or property, this can be more valuable than any gadget. It says, “You’re not alone. I believe in you, not just in what you do for us right now, but in who you’re becoming.”
Marketers spend their days thinking about the customer journey, the guest experience, the campaign, and the brand. They’re the ones obsessing over details, fighting for budgets, defending strategies, and somehow keeping twelve spinning plates in the air without dropping one.
Marketers are the ones who:
Sometimes, they are the last to be invested in.
Whether you choose:
If you’re the marketer, feel free to forward this with a simple subject line: “If you’re shopping for me, start here…
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