Designing A Business Card: 5 Things You Need To Know

Designing A Business Card

The Huffington Post   First Posted: 11/12/11 04:40 PM ET Updated: 11/12/11 04:40 PM ET

While the information that goes on a business card may have changed over time, replacing fax numbers with Twitter handles, the card itself is still a critical part of a real-world networking strategy. You can't squander face-to-face opportunities to strengthen professional bonds. And as with your website or Facebook page, when you're meeting contacts in person, your business card is both the first thing they see and the impression you leave after your first meeting. A thoughtfully designed, compelling business card can help you make a real connection and bring more business in the door.

But you don't need to hire a professional designer or spend a fortune to get a business card that makes you memorable. Want to design a card that helps you make -- and keep -- valuable connections? Here are five things you need to know.

1. Dress for the occasion.

Image is everything -- and your business card is no exception. You need to make sure that like you and all the other vital elements of your business, it's dressed for success. According to ZoeTennesen, creative services manager and art director for Dallas-based PR firm HCK2 Partners, "You wouldn't go to a meeting at a Fortune 500 company in shorts and flip flops. Make your business card 'dresses appropriately' for the kind of customers you want to attract." Like it or not, a potential customer will form an opinion about who you are and what your company is based on specific visual attributes of your card: Paper thickness (which should always be 120 pound and higher), typography choice and color scheme. These days, we even see variations on size, shape and orientation.

"That's asking a lot from a 3.5" x 2" piece of cardstock, so it's important to use everything available to you -- the paper, the type, the feel, the shape -- to help tell your story," Tennesen adds. She recommends thinking beyond traditional shapes and types of business cards and using examples like these for inspiration.

2. Never use clip art.

Clip art is the number-one design element that can ruin a business card, according to Lolo Siderman, founder of Santa Monica, Calif.-based design company Gypsywing Media. "For the love of all things holy and sacred, never use clip art," she warns. "It looks cheap and diminishes the image of any company." In fact, you should only add graphics to your business card if you are 100 percent sure it will help reinforce your branding rather than confuse it. Even one little piece of bad clip art on your business card will make your business seem small, inexperienced and devoid of marketing savvy. To illustrate the "no clip art" rule, Tennesen says, consider these scenarios:

  • What would you think if a fancy restaurant served on paper plates?

  • What would you think if your hairstylist wore a baseball cap?

  • What would you think if the car wash was located on a dirt road?

That's the kind of pain your contacts will feel when you use clip art. It doesn't help your card communicate anything and, in most cases, makes it worse. People will assume you take a "good enough" approach to business and will be less likely to choose to work with you.

3. Consider including a QR code.

A QR code is a matrix barcode that is readable by smartphones and can be a great way to make a connection between your real life and online marketing materials. You can use this code to create special, memorable features on your website and reward those you meet in person for reaching out to you. "A quick Google search for a QR Code Generator will turn up a lot of cheap or free options for creating and downloading a QR code," says Erik Wolf, marketing expert and founder of Atlanta-based online marketing firm Zero-G Creative. The reason I recommend this is because QRs make for great conversation starters and gives you an opportunity for a clever marketing moment if your code leads to a special landing page on your website." For example, the QR code on the back of Wolf's business card takes users to a special landing page on his site that reads, "We've met before, haven't we?" The BarCode News provides an easy-to-use, free QR generator that can be linked to your phone number, contact information, email address, a special URL, SMS or a simple line of text. Just make sure to test your QR code with as many smartphones as possible before you go to print.

4. Resist clutter.

Entrepreneurs trying to create compelling business cards that acknowledge all their many points of contact online can blur their overall message and actually confuse potential customers. The two most important pieces of information on an effective business card have remained the same for almost two decades: your phone number and email address. "The best business card I ever saw was while I was a student at Art Center," Tennesen says. "Our professor was constantly grinding us about simplifying, removing clutter and getting to the heart of the message we were trying to communicate. So many business cards over-communicate and end up making you look needy. His business card consisted of four simple elements: His name, his phone number, black text, white paper. And it was powerful. When is the last time you saw a card like that? It shouted, 'I'm not desperate, I don't beg for work, and I am exclusive.'" This very simple card might not work for everyone, and including elements like a personal cell phone number and company website address is often smart. However, Tennesen says when you're considering adding Twitter handles, Skype aliases, LinkedIn profile links and IM nicknames to a card, remember these are extras you can introduce to the relationship once it is solidified, but don't a relationship make.

5. Don't be cheap.

Everyone knows where to get 1,000 business cards online for 99 cents -- or even for free (if you don't mind sharing precious card real estate with the Vistaprint logo). And with the economy still shaky, you may find this a tempting cost to cut. But, if you don't want your card to get shoved into a wallet, a desk drawer or tossed into the recycling bin, you need it to stand out, and 99 cents won't be enough to cover the cost of true distinctiveness. As is true with any other component of your business, you need to invest time and money into producing a quality business card that has a chance of remaining on someone's desk, and better yet, a chance of making someone check out your website, send an email, pick up the phone or visit you in person. "I have never made a decision to work with someone based solely on a business card," Tennesen says. "But I have made the decision not to work with many people for the same reason. Invest some dollars upfront into creating the kind of image that will appeal to the kind of customers you want to attract. Partner with a designer or agency who understands your business and knows how to communicate your unique selling proposition through the print medium."


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While the information that goes on a business card may have changed over time, replacing fax numbers with Twitter handles, the card itself is still a critical part of a real-world networking strategy.
While the information that goes on a business card may have changed over time, replacing fax numbers with Twitter handles, the card itself is still a critical part of a real-world networking strategy.
 
 
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06:56 PM on 01/07/2012
The most important rule is......'don't be boring'.
04:22 PM on 12/06/2011
Yes, the business card is still one's first and lasting impression. I use a virtual business card from http://www.imtoolsuite.com/go/foreasymarketing
02:01 AM on 11/26/2011
The Card Swapp App converts your business information into a QR code.

http://cardswapp.com/

It is going to change the way you use QR.
06:12 PM on 11/20/2011
I still think that handing out something tangible establishes a true connection between two people.
I found an exceptionally good tool that I use for this specific reason.
I think its well designed gizmo. I think it is called a LifeCard. The company calls it a "Social Machine".
Kinda cool: http://Lifecards.me
09:26 PM on 11/14/2011
After being in the print industry for a decade, I completely agree with this article. There are a lot of ways to spice up business cards that don't necessaril­y cost a grip (Spot UV, Foil stamping, Embossing, Die Cutting.) Another thing to add, if you do go the extra mile on a business card, make sure that your website is up to par. Too many times clients buy nice cards only to have it go to a homemade gnarly website that showed no real value and really defeated the purpose altogether­. Personally­, I use business cards as gateways to email and websites more than phone.
11:57 AM on 11/14/2011
TxTImpact has Mobile QR codes or 2D code are codes in the same way as ordinary barcodes are, but their matrix structure can hold more information. The codes are also mobile in the sense that you can use the camera on your mobile device to scan and decode them. You can convert a web address (URL), a phone number, an email address or plain text into a mobile code. After scanning it with your camera phone, you will have instant access to the encoded information straight on the display of your mobile device.
http://www.txtimpact.com/mobileqrcode.asp
03:11 PM on 11/13/2011
Nice article but I would add 1) call to action 2) value proposition - how you can add value, 3) headshot, 4) contact information email, phone (google voice), website, and Twitter handle or LinkedIn address as appropriate to your audience. Also, 8 point font is a no no unless your target market are under 30 years old.
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FreedToChoose
...lest my wife says I'm not.
08:56 AM on 11/13/2011
If they fit your style. I carry them in my pocket calendar. Made a little holder where a half dozen or so fit nicely. Make them myself. Here's how:

Buy some 8 1/2 X 11 card stock at your favorite office supply store. We have Staples and Office Depot here.

Using your word processing software (MS word for me) set up a three column layout with 35" columns and left and right margins of 0.25"

Type the copy you want--name, phone, email, address, whatever--centered

Set the font, size and exact line spacing in points (this is important)

Play with spacing until you have four cards per column exactly two inches apart. Word has a ruler which is accurate and I set spacing so the first lines are two inches apart.

Print and adjust until you have what you want, then cut them into 2" X 3.5" cards.

...or go but some...
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FreedToChoose
...lest my wife says I'm not.
09:00 AM on 11/13/2011
Oops, forgot... (Perry moment?)... Article is correct on it presenting you as yourself and using good paper which is available.

BTW, and this may be true for others, if you use Staples and they don't have what you want in the store, you can order it online and have it shipped to your local store with free shipping, usually in a day or two.
11:53 AM on 11/16/2011
(Perry moment?)

I still prefer brain fart.
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FreedToChoose
...lest my wife says I'm not.
08:59 AM on 11/17/2011
Got me...
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UDKM2010
Life is better in Boardshorts.
07:33 AM on 11/13/2011
I have a whole box in my desk at work. I'll let you have them for free, just scratch out my info and write yours. Let people know you are serious about going green.
04:09 AM on 11/13/2011
It has happened -- Companies have started with their company names misspelled. The Millenium Hotel in NYC was one such. Another is Symantec, having a name derived from the word "semantics". Apparently, the founders thought the word was spelled "symantics¨. (A Symantec employee told me about this.)

West of Boston, Mass., the place name "Waverley" is known; some businesses incorporate that name into their company names, but misspell it fairly often, especially those on Waverley Oaks Road. It's often misspelled as "Ẅaverly", which is a legitimate spelling, as well, but incorrect for that road. More than a few businesses on that road misspell their own addresses.

[If you think misspelling your own company name is bad, putting up a stone monument honoring Christopher Columbus (in 1992) with his first name cut into stone as "Christofer" is arguably worse. Almost all of the misspelled name was filled in with chips from the rough sides of the monument, bonded with something that didn't withstand weathering. It's on the southwest corner of the Waltham Common.]

You really, truly, do not want misspellings (or punctuation errors) on your business card!
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CTDFalconer
Think twice, post once.
09:26 AM on 11/13/2011
Few things make you look worse right off the bat than grammar and spelling mistakes in official business communications.
01:20 AM on 11/13/2011
I think you did readers a disservice by taking a swipe at Vistaprint. I created some very nice cards on their website: there were many design options and a nice, easy tool to handle the layout. True, I didn't get the free ones -- I wanted to go with one of the motifs that required payment of a whopping $3.99 (for 250 cards). But their logo is nowhere to be found on my cards, front or back! I'm guessing their logo doesn't appear on their free cards, either.
12:33 AM on 11/13/2011
Letterpress printing. Sure I'm biased -- but really, I got into the printing business because of the WOW factor. Thick paper, dimensionality, craft -- a card you remember. SO not digital.

And I'm a liberal small business owner. Crazy, right??
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CTDFalconer
Think twice, post once.
09:29 AM on 11/13/2011
I say that handcraft is is more impressive the scarcer it becomes. I love that people keep letterpress alive even for the little things like business cards.
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Max Imus
correcting GOP mistakes
10:19 AM on 11/13/2011
Maybe you can pioneer QR Tags on letterpress. That would be an impressive feat.
12:08 AM on 11/13/2011
Honored to see my post Designing a Business Card that Converts into Sales being mentioned here on Huffington Post. Thanks everybody for sharing. :)
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Moxo
Our enemies are in the GOP.
09:11 PM on 11/12/2011
Aww... I miss my Rolodex! had to trade it in for the corporate on-line version! I should get another one and hide it in my office.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
flowereater
Proceed, Governor . . .
01:55 PM on 11/14/2011
I have for you. It's sitting on a dusty bookshelf. I can't seem to part with it.
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10:22 PM on 01/06/2012
My old boss lived and died by his Rolodex. I had a mini-one, not the spinning type, on my desk for years. I just couldn't give it up. Sadly, it's made it's way somewhere to the back of some shelf, haven't looked for it for a year, but I don't think I'll ever have the heart to throw it away.
08:50 PM on 11/12/2011
Andy Warhol's business card just said "Andy Warhol Enterprises", his address and phone number.
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Moxo
Our enemies are in the GOP.
09:15 PM on 11/12/2011
I don't need a business card - everyone important knows who I am.
And if they don't... they are not important!
:-)
01:25 AM on 11/13/2011
"And if they don't... they are not important!"

Says you.
06:28 PM on 11/16/2011
"I don't need no stinkin business cards...."