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    Is It Time to Finally Ditch Your Paper Business Cards?

    This post originally appeared on the American Express OPEN Forum, where Mashable regularly contributes articles about leveraging social media and technology in small business.

    If you've ever returned from a business trip with a stack of business cards, you've no doubt wondered -- as you're manually typing in all those names, phone numbers and email addresses -- if there's a better way.

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    It turns out there are lots of better ways. Too many, in fact, and that's the problem. The lack of a standard means that a great solution like the Bump app will only work if the person you're trying to link up with has the app, not to mention an iPhone or Android-based smartphone. You could, of course, use your phone's camera to take a picture of the other person's business card, but that would still require that he or she has a business card in the first place. And after you do that, you'll still have to manually enter the information anyway.

    In November, LinkedIn announced an alternative that avoids the lack-of-a-standard conundrum by essentially digitizing an analog card. As the video below outlines, the CardMunch iPhone app works by capturing the image of a business card, recognizing it and then saving it on your phone as a contact. In another nice perk, LinkedIn also integrates that person's information from his or her profile on the network.

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    Sid Viswanathan, product manager at LinkedIn, says that CardMunch began with the pragmatic realization that the paper business card is not going away any time soon. "We understand that business cards still exist," he says. "They're still used out in the field when you're attending conferences." Viswanathan says that 10 billion business cards are printed annually -- that's more than one for every person on Earth.

    As great as LinkedIn's solution is to the business card dilemma, you'll note that CardMunch still requires one of the parties to have a standard business card. It's also quite possible that you will run into someone who doesn't have the CardMunch app and will still need a paper card.

    On the other hand, if you're in the tech industry, the type of business card you use says something about you. Perhaps this isn't the case now, but some time down the road, handing out a paper card will have all the cachet of an @aol.com email address. Viswanathan says that, with 130 million members, that's not a big issue for LinkedIn. "We maintain that the social protocol of exchanging business cards is still intact," he notes. But Viswanathan concedes that in Silicon Valley circles, that may be more of a concern.

    Until that comes to pass, though, there are a few good options for businesspeople who want to set aside their business cards, once and for all. The following two-step solution will allow you to do just that:

    First, use CardMunch to capture business card information that's presented to you. This way, you don't have to ever take a business card home again. (Of course, you might have to take one if you're not getting good reception on your phone, but once you're in range, you can process the card and pitch it.)

    If you want to present your business card, meanwhile, there's another free app called Cardcloud. As outlined in the video below, Cardcloud lets you create a digital card that you can email to your prospective contact. Cardcloud also boasts LinkedIn integration -- new users can sign in via their LinkedIn profile. (You can also use your Facebook account.)

    That's the dream, at least. In my own experience, I could not, despite multiple attempts using my LinkediIn and Facebook data, create an account on Cardcloud. Nor could I create one manually. Renato Valdés Olmos, co-founder and CEO of Cardcloud, says that the iPhone app had "a little bug" in mid-January, when I tried to register. He said the bug should be fixed "within the next few weeks."

    On the other hand, I found CardMunch worked exactly as advertised, connecting me to my LinkedIn account on the first try. And if you don't have an account, the app directs you to start one, which is is a great recruiting tool for the brand. The app also recognized my paper cards and quickly integrated that information as well. If CardMunch could emulate Cardcloud's functionality (on a good day), then LinkedIn will offer a great end-to-end solution. But when Cardcloud gets up and running again, the two will do just fine. Despite that, it would be unrealistic to expect everyone to go completely digital. We'll just have to accept that paper business cards will be with us for a little while longer.

    Image courtesy of iStockphoto, Thomas_Eye_Design

    This story originally published on Mashable here.

     

    23 comments

    • Lap  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      I love my business card. The coloring is bone and the lettering is something called Silian Rail.
    • DEATH  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      Nice idea but paper cards are still too important to leave behind and will stay that way after all those gadgets are gone. They are just easier to leave at places and hand out. No need for for phones that might run out of battery life or an app that people wont bother using.

      People need to stop trying to fix things that are not problem and work on more useful things.
    • LEFTHANDOFGOD  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      I am asked daily for my business card and find it iimportant to promote word of mouth for my business, So I see no change anytime soon atleast not for me.
    • Greg  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      If you are manually typing in business card info perhaps you have been in a freakin' coma for the last 10 years,. or have never gone electronics shopping. For the last 15-ish years I've owned an inexpensive, business card scanner. About 4x4x2" in it's earliest version, you insert a card, the image is captured, and the OCR allows catagorizing.

      Though personally, my cards are no longer paper. Because of my line, I went to carbon fiber around '05.
    • Westerly  •  Wallingford, Connecticut  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      To use Cloudcard or whatever, you still need an address. Have you ever tried to decipher an scribled e-mail address, especially one written on a cocktail napkin after a few drinks. Its a whole lot simpler just to give or get a card.
    • greene_teeth  •  Chattanooga, Tennessee  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      Heck no, the paper business cards are dropped off and reused. Sometimes they are copied off by hand or the Xerox machine. Everybody keeps wanting to limit our choices.
    • M  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      This is stupid why would you ever give up business cards and without a business card what would your phone scan?
    • Brian M  •  Scranton, Pennsylvania  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      I love my business card more than I love my wife and kids.
    • MadMark  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      You ever try to write a short message and stick a app into a door jamb? How about anyone on the planet without the gadget? A business card with a signature on the back can be a magic key. How you going to show the signature? I had a business card from a sheriff that said "extend all courtesy" and his sig on the back. How you going to show *THAT* in an "app"?! Just because we can use technology for something does NOT imply that it is somehow "better" than the traditional way. You can also tell a lot about someone by the card they present. Feel the edges, if it's "microperfed" you know they just ran one off on the printer. When the printing is flat instead of raised, it tells you something. It's NOT just the "printing" that needs to be captured! In the old days cards would have the corners bent when presented to indicated "personal" or a "business" call. I go thru about 1000 cards / year.
    • JL  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      Not everybody has a LinkedIn account. In particular, I find that my Asian colleagues rarely have a LinkedIn account. Furthermore, the ritual of exchanging business cards in Japan is a formal part of every business meeting that isn't likely to change soon...not should it.
    • QXR  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      NO!!
    • John Wayne  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      You ditch yours, so that people will utilize mine!
    • Shnookie  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      I wouldn't ditch business cards any more than I would ditch books or land-line phones. They all fulfill a need, a niche, that technology cannot duplicate.

      And how fun is it to hand someone a business card (showing off your business credentials on one side) and jot a quick, flirty message on the back for those personal hook ups. Or just to be able to note on someone *elses* card ("Bob's friend"). And it's so cheap, tuck it away, keep it safe, no worries about a battery dying or being in range or having the digital container stolen, etc. Business cards can be tacked up at your local deli or store or dropped in a bin for a contest easily, they're just...too handy. Don't need matching hardware or programs, just another person to slip it to.
    • InnerView  •  Irvine, California  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      "CardMunch" is such a stupid, stupid... stoooopid name.

      CardSwap. CardDiscover. CardIn. CardExchange. BCard. CardTrade. CardRun.

      Aside from that gripe, yeah, business cards are done, its too last 00 decade. Its over.
    • Libertarian  •  Sacramento, California  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      So what happens when your wonderful smartphone goes dead at the time you need it? Another I am tied to the internet and my phone story. Sad, just sad.
    • SMIBs Rule  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      I don't think the people posting comments realize this is a paid commercial promoting the app. In fact most of what is on the internet is a commercial designed to get us to do something. Just Saying.
    • The Big Salad  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      I can barely type anymore, my iPhone finishes everything for me and punctuates it. Why is this good? I'm becoming lazy as could be, and I can barely write in cursive at all because I type well. Can these people even think without a computer in front of them?
    • Quietman555  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      does this writer hate printers and their familes???? he seems to want to destroy them, btw, who will print the books when you run them out of business?
    • Cris  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      After a storm, when we lost our internet access, my office was at a complete standstill, because everything was computerized and we could not access our server. Had I had my Rolodex, it would have been business as usual, and I wouldn't have lost out on sales.
    • Breadman  •  1 mth 1 day ago
      Darn, what will I put in the fishbowl for free lunches.....
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