A normal digital business card is one-way — you hand over your details and hope they follow up. A two-way card flips it: the moment someone scans, they save your contact and a clean form invites them to share theirs back. You capture the lead instantly, straight into your CRM.
One scan drops your name, title, company and links into their phone — correctly spelled, instantly searchable, no paper to lose.
A tasteful 'share your details' form appears. You choose the fields — name, email, phone, company, a note — and whether to ask for consent.
The contact lands in your dashboard and fires out to every channel you've connected: SMS to your phone, a webhook to your CRM, an email with their vCard, and HubSpot.
Handing someone your card — paper or digital — solves only half the exchange. You've given them a way to reach you, but you've captured nothing. The lead lives entirely in their intentions, and most intentions evaporate by the time they're back at their desk.
A two-way card closes the loop at the peak moment, while you're still standing in front of them. They save you, you capture them. No 'let me get your email', no business-card photo you never transcribe, no lead that quietly dies in a lanyard pocket.
Put the code on a conference badge, a table-tent at your booth, the back of a phone, or a printed card. When a prospect scans, the experience feels like premium software, not a form: your branded card first, then a one-tap invite to share their details back.
You decide exactly what to ask for and whether consent is required, so the card fits everything from a quick hallway hello to a regulated enterprise sale.
The instant someone submits, the lead is stored in your QRs.bd dashboard (exportable to CSV) and fanned out to every channel you've switched on. Get an SMS to your phone so you can follow up before they've left the room. Post a signed webhook to Zapier or Make and route it into Salesforce, Pipedrive or any CRM. Receive an email with their details attached as a vCard so they save straight to your contacts. And create them natively in HubSpot.
Each channel is independent and best-effort — if one is down, the others still deliver and the lead is never lost. Connect once at the workspace level and it applies to every two-way card you create.
It's a QR business card that exchanges contacts in both directions: when someone scans it they save your contact details, and a form lets them share their details back to you. You capture the lead instantly instead of just handing yours out.
Into your QRs.bd dashboard (with CSV export) and, if you connect them, out to an SMS alert, a signed webhook (Zapier/Make → any CRM), an email with the prospect's vCard attached, and HubSpot — all at once.
Yes. Turn on name, email, phone, company and a note individually, and optionally require a consent checkbox with your own wording before a prospect can submit.
No. The camera on modern iPhones and Android phones opens the card directly, and the 'Add to contacts' button hands a real .vcf file to the native Contacts app — even inside in-app browsers.
You control whether consent is required and what wording appears, the prospect submits their own details voluntarily, and you remain the data controller for the contacts you collect. Enable the consent gate where you need a recorded opt-in.
No. HubSpot is one of several delivery options. The dashboard, CSV export, SMS, email and generic webhook all work without it — connect only the channels you want.
Free to start. Add SMS, webhook, email and HubSpot delivery when you're ready.