Your Business Card: Is It Helping Or Hurting Your Sales?
Rosalie Berg
Real Estate Finance PR, Marketing & Social Media Agency President | Mortgage Public Relations & Marketing
I often say that a business card is a company’s most-used brochure. It’s tiny as brochures go, but it has a very similar purpose—and can have greater importance. Besides providing your contact details, your business card gives those who receive it an instant impression as to who your company is, what it stands for and its level of professionalism.
Each time I go to a conference, I mentally critique every business card I get. Yes, I’m in marketing and I do those kinds of things, but I’m not alone. Whether consciously aware of it or not, one casts judgment and evaluates a company with every data point available. And at a conference, a business card may be the only data point people get.
As you ponder whether your business card is helping or hurting your company’s growth, consider these four critical questions:
Does your business card enlighten?
Since this may be the only brochure you’re able to distribute to all of your contacts, your business card needs to concisely and effectively convey what your company does. If it doesn’t do that, you’ve missed a huge opportunity.
Is the font so small that a person in their 40s, 50s or 60s can’t read it without their glasses?
I find that most graphic designers love small fonts, as they consider them visually pleasing. Don’t let them mislead you into thinking that small fonts are logical for business. The key is to make a business card legible when you need it to be read.