Business Card
The business card covers the practical side of working life. It comes in three sub-types — Contact, Receipt, and Subscription — each with its own structured fields. Freelancers and self-employed users get the most out of it, but anyone keeping track of their professional relationships and spending will find it useful.
How to Create
Press n to open the New Card menu, or the number key matching Business's position in your enabled card types (typically 2).
- Tap New Card from anywhere in the app.
- Choose Business from the card type list.
- Select a sub-type: Contact, Receipt, or Subscription.
- Fill in the fields for that sub-type and save.
The Business Point
The Related point (Point 3) adapts to whichever sub-type you chose:
Contact — Store a business relationship.
- Name, Role, Phone, Email, URL.
Receipt — Log a transaction.
- Amount, Date, Category.
Subscription — Track a recurring payment.
- Service name, Cost, Billing Period, Renewal Date, Status.

Once created, a card keeps its sub-type. The title and description fields (the Card Info point) are shared across all three — use them to add context the structured fields don't cover.
Tips
- Contacts as a client roster. Create a Contact card for each client or collaborator. Use the URL field for their website or LinkedIn. Add them to a "Clients" deck to keep them grouped — see Decks.
- Receipts for expense tracking. Log business purchases as Receipt cards. Assign them all to an "Expenses" deck and you have a browsable record at tax time.
- Subscriptions before they renew. Use the Renewal Date field and Status to stay on top of what you're paying for. Mark anything you've cancelled as inactive in the description so it stays in your history without cluttering your active list.
- Mix sub-types in one deck. A deck called "Project X" can hold the Contact cards for everyone involved, any Receipt cards for project expenses, and relevant Subscription cards — all in one place.
For a full breakdown of the five-point card layout, see Filling Your Card.