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Business Card Basics

     

Making a great first impression often begins with your business card. Your business card is typically the first of your marketing materials that a new client will see. It should clearly tell your client who you are and what you do at first glance.

A business card is a convenient way to introduce yourself at networking events, and it's key to passing your contact information along when you meet someone.

Important elements to include when designing your business card include:

  • Your contact information, including your business mailing address. Including a mailing address greatly increases your credibility and makes you look much more established! If you're concerned about privacy, a Post Office box or mailbox is a great way to go.
  • Your logo, as discussed in many of the other articles in our library.
  • Strong secondary graphics and design elements, which we refer to as your visual vocabulary.
  • A list of your services, which is especially important if you offer multiple services or if your business name doesn't specifically make clear what you do. Be concise when creating this list, so that all of the relevant information will fit on the business card.

Combining these elements will result in a business card that does more than just pass along your contact information—it will also build your brand.

The best practices for using your business card include:

  • First of all, be sure that you carry your cards with you at all times—keep a stack in your desk, your car, your briefcase or purse, and your wallet. This will ensure that you always have a card available when you meet someone who should have one!
  • Take your business cards with you to business meetings, networking events, conferences, trade shows—everywhere you go that's business related. And be sure to take some with you to the gym, the grocery store—you never know where you'll meet a potential client.
  • Don't pass business cards out at random—wait until you've made a connection with someone or until you've been asked for it. Making a connection with a prospect will lead to a sale far more often than just "dealing cards" to everyone you meet.
  • Include a copy of your card with correspondence or packages—it automatically puts a "business spin" on all of the mail you send out. It also provides a backup return address, in case the envelope has been damaged or thrown away.
  • Give stacks of your cards to business partners and other possible sources of referral and business partners, so that they can hand them out when they're telling people about your services—it makes the referral more likely to produce results.



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About the Author

Erin Ferree is a branding coach, design genius and strategic thinker. She's been told that her right-brain, left-brain combination of creativity and logic is hard to come by... and that it's what small business owners need to be successful. She loves connecting the dots between passion and profit, mixing strategy and inspiration and shaking things up.

She deeply enjoys working with entrepreneurs who want to help more people and look good doing it. Who want all of their branding and marketing to make sense and speak to their ideal clients. And who want an open, honest, inviting brand with integrity - instead of using icky, pushy, sleazy marketing tactics and trickery.

She's branded over 450 small businesses in the last 10 years. She's been published in so many books and periodicals that she stopped counting. She's shared stages with some awesome people - like Michele PW, Linda Hollander, Lisa Cherney, Sheri McConnell and Kelly O'neil.

She also enjoys hugging her corgi-dog Stanley, cooking and throwing parties so her friends can enjoy them.

Small business branding, brand coaching and logo design articles at http://www.brandstyledesign.com




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