Exchanging LinkedIn QR codes requires you to pull out your phone and break the conversation. BizCard replaces QR codes with a distraction-free E-ink business card that shows your live profile at a glance. Clean, effortless, and human-first networking.
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Congratulations on the launch 🎉
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Congrats on the launch 👏
BizCard is a really clever way to make networking more human and seamless, removing the awkward phone fumbling that kills momentum in conversations.
Curious, are early users mostly attending conferences and trade shows, or smaller meetups and local events?
The customizable profiles and E-ink design look very practical, but it might help new users know which setup gives the fastest impact... having one universal card, or tailoring it for different audiences.
Which feature are your users loving most so far, the instant NFC tap, profile customization, or simply keeping eye contact during exchanges?
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Quick question about BizCard — it feels like the product is designed around the social friction of introductions, not just the mechanics of sharing contact info.
In real networking moments, the awkward part is often when and how to exchange details, rather than the details themselves. Was there a particular user behavior or observation that led you to focus on making that moment feel more natural?
Asking because that sensitivity to real-world context really comes through in the first impression.
Hey Product Hunt! 👋I’m Jack Gan, cofounder of BizCard — an Eink NFC business card that lets you share your profile with a simple tap without breaking eye contacts.
Over the past few years, I’ve worked on AI agents, but I kept noticing the same simple problem in real life:
even as digital tools got better, my in-person networking felt worse. 🤕
At conferences and meetups 🧑💼🧑💻, every “great conversation” ended the same way.
Someone said, “Let’s connect,” then we all pulled out our phones 📱, dug through LinkedIn, held up QR codes, waited for apps to load… and the moment was gone ⏳. I went home with dozens of “LinkedIn QR contacts” — and almost zero real follow-ups.
They felt like ghost contacts, not real connections.
BizCard is our attempt at a remedy 💡
With a simple tap on our Eink card, you can share your details instantly — no unlocking phones, no breaking eye contacts 👀🤝
You can customize what the card shows for different events or audiences, but the core idea is very simple:
Stay in the conversation while you exchange details.
With BizCard, you can walk into a trade show or meetup 🎪 and connect with 3, 5, or even 10 people in a row — without everyone inviting their phones into the interaction 🚫📱.
We’re launching an early batch 🚀 for people who are tired of ghost contacts and want more present, human networking ❤️
If this resonates with you, we’d love your feedback and support 🙏
We’ll be in the comments all day 💬 answering questions about the hardware, the design process, and how we’re using BizCard at our own events.
Congratulations on the launch 🎉
Quick question about BizCard — it feels like the product is designed around the social friction of introductions, not just the mechanics of sharing contact info.
In real networking moments, the awkward part is often when and how to exchange details, rather than the details themselves. Was there a particular user behavior or observation that led you to focus on making that moment feel more natural?
Asking because that sensitivity to real-world context really comes through in the first impression.