Business cards are more often connected only with the contact information they provide rather than the images you put on them.
Part of this comes from viewing business cards purely as a means of helping someone contact you rather than with anything having to do with marketing yourself. The best business cards are going to be the ones that have personality.
Don't just look at normal business cards when you have a whole slew of custom business cards open to you to create if you just know what options are out there and how to best capitalize on them.
So, what are those options?
I couldn't even begin to list them all here, because they're limited largely by the imagination. Printing technology has advanced enough to ensure you can have some very nice images on your business cards.
I've seen people who have pictures of themselves on the card. These are people who understand one very important aspect of business cards: people might have your name and number, but what good is that if they don't remember who you are?
By providing your actual picture you're not only making your card more unique, but also giving people a visual to ensure they'll remember exactly who you are months after you first talked to them.
That is the significance of all great visuals on business cards, and it doesn't always have to be a picture of yourself to work.
I've seen business cards with reproductions of paintings on the back of them, or a very large, prominent logo on the front. These unique images provide a distinction between their card and all the others I see.
Put a map on your business card showing people exactly where your store is, or provide a picture of what your building looks like to help people identify it when driving down the street.
I could go on and on when it comes to the various images that are open to you. The best thing you can do is figure out an image that will accomplish two primary goals.
The first is to be unique specifically to you. When a person sees that image they'll know exactly who you are because it hooks directly to you in some way.
The second is to be sure that your image is different enough from everyone else that it will be that much more memorable. To take one of the previous examples of a map showing where your store is. Well, if everyone started doing that it would obviously become less memorable and do nothing to help someone remember you.
Take the time to look into the various options you have for custom business cards. Make sure that when you hand someone a business card, they'll be sure to remember you.
Next Day Business Cards
Before you begin your business card printing here are some of the things to ask yourself about.
Contact information is probably the most important thing for your business card, but how much of it do you put on your card? There are a lot of different ways people can contact each other these days, and most companies are going to have a lot of different avenues for people to take in order to get into contact with them.
But a business card only has a certain amount of room on it. The more information you attempt to pack into it the more cluttered your card begins to look and the less professional it appears.
A wall of information is also harder to read. If you have a big block of various numbers people are going to have a harder time distinguishing one thing from another.
Also consider how hard it might be for a person to figure out which method of contact to use. If you have your email address, fax number, phone number, cell phone number, and address all on your card, which one is a person supposed to use? Is one method better for contacting you than another? Will any of them do and be perfectly fine?
A good system is to limit your contact information to three primary ways for them to get in touch with you and don't go too far beyond that. This way you're giving people some variety without overwhelming them with various choices.
Something else that happens quite often is the people who are looking to make the most out of their business card printing try to put in a lot of information, and to do so, they decrease the size of the font.
In fact, for those trying to use creative images and other unique details, the contact information is what is given the least amount of attention, and so is reduced in size to fit in everything else.
Yes, you need to have a creative card, but don't overlook how significant your contact information is. This is the primary purpose of your business card. You're trying to hand people a means of getting into contact with you, so why would you then disregard that contact information by making it too small to read?
I'm all for people getting creative with their business cards, just be sure you aren't getting a little too creative when it comes to how people contact you. Consider this the business side of your card, and when you do business, you get right to the point and act as professional as you can. Make sure the same is true of your business card.
Kaitlyn Miller has sinced written about articles on various topics from Credit Cards, Advertising Guide and Brochures. For more information, you can visit this page on . Kaitlyn Miller's top article generates over 22200 views. to your Favourites.
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