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Most business cards get thrown away. The ones that don’t share a few things in common: they’re easy to read, they include a way to follow up digitally, and they reflect something real about the person handing them over.

This guide covers what to put on a modern business card, what to leave off, and how to build one using the Adobe Express business card maker, a free tool from Adobe specifically designed for creating print-ready and digital cards without any design experience.

What a Networking-Ready Business Card Actually Needs

Before touching any design tool, it helps to think about what your card is actually trying to do. A networking card has one job: to make it easy for the person who receives it to remember you and reach out.

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That means prioritizing signal over noise.

Include:

  • Your name, large enough to read at a glance
  • One primary job title or descriptor (not three)
  • One phone number or email, whichever you actually respond to
  • Your website or LinkedIn URL
  • A QR code linking to wherever you want them to go next
  • Your logo or a visual brand element

Leave off:

  • A second email address
  • A fax number
  • Your full mailing address (unless physically relevant to your work)
  • Anything that was true two jobs ago

The goal is a card someone can scan in three seconds and know exactly who you are and how to reach you.

Why QR Codes Have Become Standard

People at networking events don’t always have time to type in a URL or save a number on the spot. A QR code removes that friction; one scan and the follow-up path is already open. That’s why they’ve moved from a novelty to a baseline expectation on a modern business card.

A well-placed QR code on a business card can link to:

  • Your website or portfolio
  • A LinkedIn profile
  • A booking or scheduling page (Calendly, etc.)
  • A digital business card with expanded contact details
  • A specific landing page for a product or service

The QR code doesn’t need to dominate the design. A small, clean code in the corner of the back of the card is enough.

How to Build a Card in Adobe Express

Step 1 — Open the Business Card Maker and Choose a Layout

Go to the Adobe Express business card maker and sign in with a free Adobe, Google, or Apple account. Browse the template library (templates are organized by industry and style) and pick one that matches your professional context. If you work in a creative field, lean toward layouts with more visual breathing room. For corporate or consulting roles, clean and minimal tends to perform better in professional settings.

Step 2 — Lock In Your Core Information First

Before adjusting any visual elements, fill in your actual content. Replace every placeholder with your real details: name, title, contact information, and website. This approach prevents a common mistake: designing around placeholder text that doesn’t actually fit your name or role once you substitute it in.

Step 3 — Apply Your Brand Identity

Upload your logo directly into the editor. Set your brand colors using hex codes for precision. Choose a font pairing that reflects your professional tone; Adobe Express gives you access to Adobe’s full font library, the same library used across Creative Cloud applications.

If you are on an Adobe Express Premium plan (or have a Creative Cloud subscription, which includes it), the Brand Kit feature lets you save your logo, colors, and fonts and apply them across any project in one click. For anyone producing cards for a team or maintaining consistent materials across multiple platforms, this is the most practical feature in the tool.

Step 4 — Generate and Place Your QR Code

Adobe Express includes a built-in QR code generator. Enter the URL you want the code to link to, customize the color to match your palette, download the image, and upload it into your card design. Place it on the back of the card, sized small enough to leave breathing room but large enough to scan reliably, roughly 0.75 to 1 inch square works well at standard card dimensions.

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Step 5 — Export or Order Print

When the design is complete:

  • Download as PDF for professional printing at any commercial vendor. Adobe Express exports with bleed marks and high resolution, so the file is print-ready out of the box.
  • Download as PNG or JPG for digital sharing on email signatures, Slack profiles, or a digital card service.
  • Order directly through Adobe Express if you are in the US, UK, Australia, or Canada. Choose your paper stock (matte, semi-gloss, silk, linen, and others are available), review the preview, and place the order for delivery to your door.

A Quick Comparison: Print-and-Ship vs. File Ownership

One practical distinction worth understanding before you commit to a tool:

Tool Approach Print Option Best For
Adobe Express Design + file export or direct order Yes (US, UK, AU, CA) Brand control, file portability, Adobe ecosystem users
Canva Design + file export or direct order Yes (select regions) Large free template library, beginners
Vistaprint Design tied to platform printing Yes (core offering) Affordable bulk orders, fast turnaround
Moo Design tied to platform printing Yes (core offering) Premium paper stocks, high-end finishes
Jukebox Design tied to platform printing Yes (core offering) Specialty materials, unique card formats

Adobe Express is the only tool in this list that gives you full file ownership and an optional print service, meaning you can design once and take that file anywhere, or order directly without switching platforms. That flexibility is genuinely useful if you want to compare print vendors, reorder through a local shop, or repurpose the design for digital use.

What Makes a Card Memorable Beyond the Information

The content on your card matters most, but a few design decisions affect whether someone keeps it or discards it:

  • Paper stock signals quality. A card on thin stock reads as an afterthought. Adobe Express’s print options include 18-point matte, UV gloss, and premium linen stocks that feel intentional in hand.
  • White space improves readability. Cramming every possible detail onto a card makes all of it harder to find. Less content, better placed, performs better.
  • Consistency with your other materials builds trust. A card that shares fonts, colors, and logo treatment with your website and email signature reinforces a coherent professional identity. This is where Adobe Express’s integration with the broader Adobe ecosystem pays off; if you’re already using Adobe tools for other brand materials, your card can match them exactly.

Summary

A business card still does something a LinkedIn connection or a followed account can’t: it creates a physical moment of exchange that people remember. But that only works if the card itself is worth remembering.

The professionals who get the most out of their cards in 2026 aren’t the ones with the most information on them. They’re the ones who made deliberate choices about what to include, kept the design clean enough to read at a glance, and gave the recipient a frictionless way to follow up. Everything else is noise.