Most networking advice is a variation of the same line: meet people, take notes, follow up. The problem is that the tooling for that loop has been broken for decades. Paper cards die in drawers. Phone contact lists do not capture context. Spreadsheets get abandoned by the third event.
This is the gap that MyKard.link, a free digital business card platform built by Dubai based Kreative Minds, is quietly trying to close. The pitch is not just “swap paper for QR”. It is “make every connection trackable, with notes, status, and follow up, in one place”.
The freelancer reality
For freelancers and consultants in the UAE, an event is not just an event. It is a sales pipeline. Five conversations at a panel night might mean two real leads, and one of those leads is the difference between a quiet month and a strong month. Without a system to capture and follow up, those leads slip.
The classic answer is a CRM. The honest answer is that most freelancers will not maintain one. The interface is too heavy, the data entry too slow, and the value too far away. What works is something that captures information at the moment of connection, not later.
How MyKard handles this
The flow is intentionally minimal. You share your card via QR or link. The other person opens it in any browser. They tap to save your contact, instantly, with a real vCard download. From your side, the platform shows who viewed your card, when, and where you met. You can add a note such as “Wants to schedule a call next week” and tag the contact as a hot lead. From there, follow up becomes a list, not a memory game.
Because everything sits behind one personal link, the same setup serves multiple use cases at once. A QR code on a printed flyer, an Instagram bio, an email signature, or a wall at an event all funnel into the same connection log.
Why this resonates in Dubai
Dubai’s networking volume is high. Conferences, meetups, expos, and informal coffees pile up fast. The professionals who stand out are not always the ones who attend more, but the ones who follow up better. A trackable system, even a simple one, gives that small but consistent edge.
It also fits the wider direction of the city. Dubai’s policy push around AI and data is not just for big infrastructure. It is also a quiet signal that lightweight tools can be built locally, with global standards on privacy and security, and shipped to the world from here. MyKard, built by an agency in Dubai, sits inside that pattern.
What still needs proving
The product is young. Three things will determine whether MyKard moves from useful free tool to a default for UAE professionals. First, retention. Connection tools live or die on whether users come back after the first event. Second, integrations. Calendar, email, and CRM hooks will matter as professional users grow. Third, premium tier value. When paid plans arrive, the feature gap between free and paid will need to feel fair, not punishing.
The takeaway
Networking is not a problem of meeting more people. It is a problem of remembering and following up well. Tools like MyKard make the second part less effortful, and that is where the real value lives. For freelancers, consultants, and event regulars in the UAE, switching is a low cost decision with an outsized payoff.

