Open in the browser immediately
A good NFC business card should send people straight to a clear profile without asking them to install anything first.
Linket pairs NFC hardware with QR fallback, a live public profile, contact saving, lead capture, and analytics so the tap actually turns into a useful next step.
What an NFC business card should really solve
Linket uses NFC to make in-person sharing fast, then backs it up with a QR code so the same profile still works when tap is not an option. That profile can show your contact details, links, and lead form instead of only landing on a static contact page.
For most buyers, the real question is not whether NFC works. It is whether the tap creates a better experience than a paper card or a plain link. That is the part Linket is designed to improve.
These are the parts that make an NFC card worth using repeatedly
A good NFC business card should send people straight to a clear profile without asking them to install anything first.
The tap should lead to a useful next action, not just a page that forces someone to manually copy details.
After the tap, people should be able to visit your links, book, message, or submit their details for follow-up.
Coverage and reliability matter more than choosing one sharing method
These are the objections most buyers work through before they choose hardware
That is why Linket uses NFC plus QR. Modern phones can tap, and everyone else still has a scannable fallback.
No. The tap or scan opens the page in the browser, which keeps the handoff simple in meetings, campus events, and field settings.
Your hardware stays the same while your public profile, links, branding, and lead capture flow can keep evolving.
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