
Linq
CMMS software
Digital business card software
Asset management software
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
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What is Linq
Linq is a digital business card platform that lets individuals and teams share contact details and professional profiles via QR codes, NFC taps, and share links. It targets sales, recruiting, and customer-facing teams that want a standardized way to capture leads and keep contact information current. The product typically includes profile templates, contact capture forms, and team administration for managing multiple cards and branding. It focuses on identity sharing and lead capture rather than full maintenance work management workflows.
Multiple sharing methods
Linq supports common exchange methods such as QR codes, NFC-enabled cards/tags, and shareable links. This helps users share details in-person and remotely without requiring the recipient to install an app. It also reduces reliance on paper cards and manual data entry. These capabilities align with typical digital business card deployment needs for events and field teams.
Team and brand administration
The platform supports managing multiple users’ cards from a central admin experience, which is useful for standardizing branding and required fields. Admin controls can help with onboarding/offboarding and keeping profiles consistent across a team. This is a practical differentiator versus single-user card apps. It is relevant for organizations that need governance over employee-facing identity assets.
Lead capture and export
Linq commonly includes contact capture forms and mechanisms to save or export collected leads. This supports event follow-up workflows and reduces the risk of losing contacts gathered in the field. Compared with maintenance-focused tools in the reference set, this is purpose-built for networking and lead intake rather than work orders. It can complement CRM processes when exports or integrations are available.
Not a CMMS platform
Despite being listed alongside maintenance and facilities tools, Linq’s core function is digital identity sharing, not work order management. It does not typically provide preventive maintenance scheduling, parts inventory, technician dispatch, or asset lifecycle tracking expected in CMMS software. Organizations evaluating it for maintenance operations will likely need a separate system. This limits its fit for facilities and maintenance departments seeking an all-in-one solution.
Limited asset management depth
If used for tagging people or items via QR/NFC, it does not generally replace dedicated asset management capabilities such as depreciation, condition assessments, maintenance history, or hierarchical asset structures. Asset-centric reporting and compliance workflows are typically outside its scope. Teams needing robust asset registers and maintenance analytics will find gaps. It is better positioned as a contact/lead tool than an operational asset system.
Integration depth varies
Digital business card tools often rely on exports or lightweight integrations, and the breadth of native connectors can be narrower than operational platforms. If CRM/marketing automation integration is limited, teams may need manual processes or middleware. This can affect data quality and speed of follow-up after events. Buyers should validate available integrations, SSO options, and admin controls for their stack.