Stand Out in a Crowd
Creative business cards are the ones people remember.
Opinions expressed by Âé¶¹Éç contributors are their own.
It was a bold move in conservative times. But David Rokusek, owner of in Galena, Ill., wanted people to remember him. So instead of passing out a typical bland vanilla business card, “I started to pass out little whoopee cushions with my store information, claiming that I was giving away ‘Free Gas,'” Rokusek says. “It started as a joke, but people have come to the store after seeing the card somewhere else.”
There are still a few rebels who, come time to order their business cards, believe in flash, humor or just plain weirdness–whatever it takes to stand out from the crowd. Neil Hair, assistant professor of marketing at the Rochester Institute of Technology, says they may be on to something. “Exchanging information should be about an experience, creating a positive relationship between two people,” he says. “A really cool business card can put a smile on someone’s face, and it allows people to associate a good experience with your business.”
Indeed, Kevin Mitnick, founder of Mitnick Security Consulting in Henderson, Nev., hands out an aluminum card featuring a set of twist-off lock-picking tools. “I get five or six letters a day asking for samples,” he says. “And I once got a thank-you call from someone who used my card to get into the restroom after leaving his suite key on the sink.”
Murillo Design Inc.’s wooden are roughly the size of poker chips and excellent to fiddle with during conference calls.
Who wouldn’t keep the –a rubber-band-powered, desk-top catapult business card?
The Atomic Toy Co. gets the word out with a . Trust us: Everyone will want one.
Sear yourself onto a rectangle of beef jerky–yeah, real beef jerky–with a laser-etched .
So Takahashi Design/Heads Inc. goes arty with a card that functions like a modernist .
Mitnick Security’s twist-off card–for breaking into the executive suite.
It was a bold move in conservative times. But David Rokusek, owner of in Galena, Ill., wanted people to remember him. So instead of passing out a typical bland vanilla business card, “I started to pass out little whoopee cushions with my store information, claiming that I was giving away ‘Free Gas,'” Rokusek says. “It started as a joke, but people have come to the store after seeing the card somewhere else.”
There are still a few rebels who, come time to order their business cards, believe in flash, humor or just plain weirdness–whatever it takes to stand out from the crowd. Neil Hair, assistant professor of marketing at the Rochester Institute of Technology, says they may be on to something. “Exchanging information should be about an experience, creating a positive relationship between two people,” he says. “A really cool business card can put a smile on someone’s face, and it allows people to associate a good experience with your business.”
Indeed, Kevin Mitnick, founder of Mitnick Security Consulting in Henderson, Nev., hands out an aluminum card featuring a set of twist-off lock-picking tools. “I get five or six letters a day asking for samples,” he says. “And I once got a thank-you call from someone who used my card to get into the restroom after leaving his suite key on the sink.”