Dot Cards, NFC, and QR Codes: The Modern Business Card for Utah Professionals

Paper business cards had a good run. Here's what's replacing them — and whether it's worth the switch.

KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • NFC business cards let you share contact info with a phone tap — no app needed on the receiving end
  • Digital cards stay current, track analytics, and integrate with CRMs — paper cards can't
  • Dot, Popl, Linq, and V1CE are the top NFC card providers, each with different strengths
  • Traditional paper cards still have a place in some industries, but digital options are the clear future

The Paper Card Problem

Let’s be honest about what happens with traditional business cards. You go to a networking event along the Wasatch Front — maybe a Silicon Slopes mixer, a chamber of commerce meeting, or a trade show at the Salt Palace. You hand out 30 cards. Maybe five people actually enter your info into their phone. The rest end up in a pocket, on a desk, and eventually in the trash. Paper business cards have other problems too:
  • They’re immediately outdated. Change your phone number, get a promotion, switch companies? Those 500 cards you just printed are now wrong.
  • No analytics. You have zero idea if anyone actually looked at your card or visited your website after receiving it.
  • No follow-up path. A paper card doesn’t connect to your CRM, your LinkedIn, or your email marketing. It’s a dead end.
  • Environmental waste. The business card industry produces billions of cards annually. Most end up in landfills within a week.
None of this means paper cards are useless. But there are better options now, and they’re practical enough for everyday use.

What Are NFC Business Cards?

NFC stands for Near Field Communication — the same technology that powers Apple Pay and contactless credit cards. An NFC business card has a tiny chip embedded in it. When someone taps the card against their smartphone, it automatically opens a link — usually to a digital profile page with your contact info, social links, and a “Save Contact” button. No app is required on the receiving end. Any modern iPhone (XS or newer) or Android phone with NFC will respond to the tap. The person tapping your card just sees a notification pop up and taps it to open your profile. It feels like magic the first time. After that, it just feels efficient.

Dot Cards: The Market Leader

Dot (dotcards.net) is one of the most popular NFC card options, and for good reason. Here’s how it works:
  • You order a physical card (various styles — matte, glossy, metal) with an NFC chip inside
  • You set up your digital profile on Dot’s platform — name, title, company, phone, email, social links, website
  • When someone taps your card, your profile opens in their browser
  • They can save your contact directly to their phone with one tap
  • You see analytics — who tapped, when, and whether they saved your info
Dot cards typically cost $25-40 per card (one-time) with a free basic profile, or $5-10/month for premium features like custom branding, CRM integrations, and team management.

Other NFC Card Options

Dot isn’t the only player. Here’s how the competitors stack up: Popl: Similar to Dot with a focus on ease of use. Offers cards, phone accessories, and wristbands. Good team management features. Cards start around $20. The Popl Teams plan ($6/user/month) is solid for businesses deploying across a whole team. Linq: Another strong NFC option with nice customization and a clean profile interface. Cards start around $25. Their business plans include analytics dashboards and CRM integration. HiHello: Primarily a digital business card app (no physical NFC card, though they do offer QR-code-based cards). The free tier is generous, and the app is polished. Great if you want a digital card on your phone without a physical NFC card. V1CE: The premium option. V1CE makes metal and high-end NFC cards that look and feel impressive. Prices range from $50-120+ per card. If you want a business card that doubles as a conversation starter, V1CE delivers.
$25-40
Average NFC card cost (one-time)
88%
Of paper business cards discarded within a week
$0
Cost to update your digital card info

QR Code Cards: The Budget Alternative

Don’t want to invest in NFC? QR codes offer a simpler path to digital contact sharing. You can print a QR code on a traditional paper card that links to your digital profile. The recipient scans it with their phone camera, and your profile opens — similar to NFC, just with a scan instead of a tap. QR code cards are cheaper to produce (regular printing costs plus a free QR code generator) and work with every smartphone. The downside is that scanning a QR code is slightly less seamless than an NFC tap — it takes a few extra seconds and requires opening the camera app. Some providers like HiHello and Linq let you create a digital profile and generate a QR code for free. Print that QR code on a card, and you’ve got a budget digital business card solution.

Cost Comparison: Paper vs. Digital

  • Traditional paper cards: $30-75 per 500 cards, plus reprint costs whenever info changes. Over a few years, a typical professional spends $200-400 on business card printing.
  • NFC cards: $25-40 one-time per card, $0-10/month for profile features. The card itself lasts for years and the info updates instantly for free.
  • QR code cards: Same printing cost as paper cards, but the QR code links to an updatable digital profile. A good middle ground.
For a team of 10 people, NFC cards cost $250-400 total. Traditional cards for the same team cost $300-750 per printing run — and you’ll need multiple runs as people join, leave, or change roles.
💡 PRO TIP

For Utah businesses deploying NFC cards across a team, look at Popl Teams or Dot for Business. Both offer centralized admin dashboards where you can manage everyone’s profiles, ensure brand consistency, and track engagement analytics across the whole team.

Practical Benefits Beyond the Cool Factor

The “tap and share” experience is impressive, but the real value of digital business cards is operational: Always current. Change your title? Update it once in your profile. Every future tap shares the updated info. No reprinting, no waste. Analytics. See how many people tapped your card, when they did it, and whether they saved your contact. After a networking event, you can see exactly who engaged with your card. CRM integration. Premium plans from Dot, Popl, and Linq can push new contacts directly into your CRM (Salesforce, HubSpot, etc.). That networking connection goes straight into your sales pipeline instead of sitting in a desk drawer. Rich profiles. Your digital profile can include more than a paper card ever could — links to your portfolio, YouTube channel, booking calendar, LinkedIn, company website, and more. One tap gives people your entire professional presence. Sustainability. For businesses that value environmental responsibility, eliminating paper card waste is a tangible step. It’s a small thing, but it adds up across an organization.

When Traditional Cards Still Make Sense

We’re not saying paper cards are dead. There are situations where they’re still the right call:
  • Formal industries. Law firms, financial advisors, and certain executive contexts where a premium paper card signals professionalism and tradition.
  • Environments where phones aren’t handy. Not every interaction happens when both parties have their phones out.
  • International business. In some cultures, business card exchange is a formal ritual. A physical card is expected.
  • Backup. Having a few paper cards in your wallet as a fallback is just practical.
The smartest approach for most professionals? Use NFC or QR-based digital cards as your primary sharing method, and keep a small stack of traditional cards for situations that call for them.

How to Set Up Digital Cards for Your Team

Rolling out NFC cards across your team isn’t complicated, but doing it right involves a few steps:
  1. Choose a platform — pick a provider with team management features (Dot, Popl, or Linq are strong choices)
  2. Design a consistent profile template — company logo, brand colors, standard fields for everyone
  3. Order cards — most providers offer bulk pricing and custom branding for business orders
  4. Set up profiles — configure each team member’s profile with their specific info
  5. Train your team — show everyone how to use the cards and update their profiles
  6. Integrate with your CRM — connect the platform to your contact management system if available

How Brivy IT Can Help

Digital business cards sit at the intersection of technology and professional operations — exactly where we work. Brivy IT helps Utah businesses evaluate digital card platforms, deploy NFC cards across teams, integrate them with existing CRM and contact management systems, and train staff on using them effectively. Whether you’re a solo professional looking to modernize your networking or a company deploying digital cards across a sales team, we can help you set it up right. It’s a small technology shift that makes a surprisingly big impression at networking events, client meetings, and trade shows across Utah.

Digital Business Card FAQ

Do NFC business cards need batteries or charging?
No. NFC chips are passive — they draw power from the phone that taps them. There are no batteries, no charging, and they last indefinitely. The chip will outlive the card itself.
What if someone's phone doesn't support NFC?
Most smartphones made after 2018 support NFC. For older phones, you can add a QR code to the back of your NFC card as a fallback — the QR code links to the same digital profile.
Can I use NFC cards with iPhone?
Yes. iPhone XS and newer models read NFC tags natively — just hold the NFC card near the top of the phone. No app needed. Older iPhones (7, 8, X) can read NFC but require opening the NFC tag reader in Control Center.
Are digital business cards secure?
Your NFC card links to a public profile page — it only shares what you choose to share. No personal data is stored on the chip itself, just a URL. You control what information appears on your profile and can update or disable it at any time.
Can I track who taps my NFC card?
Premium plans from most providers show tap analytics — timestamps, approximate location, and whether the person saved your contact. Basic free plans typically show total tap counts without detailed analytics.

Ready to Modernize Your Business Cards?

Brivy IT helps Utah businesses deploy digital card solutions — from platform selection to team setup and CRM integration.

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author avatar
John Huston
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