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What value does Snapcard add as a Personal CRM

Most networks die quietly.
Not with a fight.
With a fade.

You meet a lady in a hotel lobby in Austin.
Good shoes. Clear eyes.
She runs a small firm that solves a problem you care about.
You talk for a few minutes.
You promise to follow up.

Then you head to the airport.
Then you have a late night.
Then three more trips.

Two months later, all that is left is a first name and a vague sense of regret in your phone’s contact list.

This is the networking problem Snapcard was built for.


The Old Tools: Big Nets, Dead Fish

Phone contacts keep names, numbers, and little else.
They store identity. They kill context.

LinkedIn and the big platforms do the opposite.
They store everything except the moment.
Endless feeds, job changes, likes, comments.
The person you met becomes a tile in a stream.

Traditional CRMs are worse for a human life.
They were made for teams, quotas, and pipelines, not for one person trying to remember one dinner in one city months ago.
They want you to file people in advance: lead, prospect, customer.
In real life, you often do not know yet.

So you stand at a conference bar and scroll.
Names. Titles.
No smell of the room.
No sense of why this one person mattered.

Your memory is not bad.
Your tools are.


The Human Problem: Memory and Timing

Relationships do not fail because you do not care.
They fail because context disappears and timing slips.

You remember:

  • The city.
  • The table by the window.
  • The story about her leaving a safe job.

But your phone remembers:

  • First name.
  • Last name.
  • Mobile.

The machine remembers what you do not need.
You remember what the machine never saw.

The gap between those two memories is where opportunity goes to die.


Snapcard: A Different First Move

Snapcard does not begin with a feed.
It begins with a moment.

You create one Snapcard in under a minute: name, phone, email, a few links. You carry it on your phone wherever you go.

When you meet someone, you do not ask for their email, spell their name twice, and promise to “connect on LinkedIn.”
You let them scan.
They see your card.
They can save your details or download a vCard.

They do not need the app.
There is no “network effect tax.”
The intelligence is for you, not for them.

At that same instant, Snapcard quietly notes:

  • The day.
  • The time.
  • The place.

If you add a note—“left Cisco to start a climate fund”—that note is private, yours alone.
You can tag her: Investor, Met at Austin Summit, Climate.

You have not filled a form.
You have recorded a memory.


The Met-At Engine: Space, Not Just Data

Over time, Snapcard draws a map of your working life.

Not a mindless location log.
A map of meetings.

You can ask it later:

  • “Architects I met in London.”
  • “Journalists from that fintech event in New York.”

The app filters your contacts by the coordinates of the venues where you stood, shook hands, and talked.

This is not voyeurism.
It is recall.

Humans remember by place: the bar, the hallway outside the main stage, the bench near the river.
Snapcard leans into that.
It treats GPS as scaffolding for meaning, not fuel for ads.

Location is used with your permission, and only to help you find your way back to people and moments you care for.
Location is not the product.
Timing is the product.


Privacy First: Your Vault, Not Their Feed

Most “smart” networking tools scrape.
They ingest email headers, calendar invites, social feeds.
They stitch together a dossier on every person you know.

You trade a little convenience for a large attack surface.

Snapcard chooses a harder road.

  • It does not sell your data.
  • It keeps private notes and tags visible only to you.
  • It uses location only when you grant permission, and only to power features like proximity alerts and Met-At recall.

Cloud backup is there.
But much of the intelligence—the way it remembers where you met, when you last spoke, when you marked someone as “keep in touch”—can work with far less constant scraping and sync.

Think of it as a vault: you hold the key, you decide what goes in, and you decide what comes back out.


Relationships First, Not Pipelines

Snapcard does not ask you to declare what a person is on day one.
You can meet someone as a stranger and let the relationship find its level over time.

You can:

  • Add loose tags and tighten them later.
  • Set a “keep in touch” rhythm—quarterly, twice a year, yearly—and let the app nudge you when the time comes.
  • Let it remind you when you land in a city where a friend or client lives, or when you walk into a place a contact once said they loved.

The logic is simple: humans are not bad at caring.
They are bad at remembering when to show it.

Snapcard’s job is not to automate your sentiment.
Its job is to surface the right person at the right moment, with the right context, so the next move feels natural rather than forced.

“Hey, I’m back in town. Coffee?”
Not, “Dear valued contact, I hope this message finds you well.”


You at the Center

Most platforms put themselves at the center: their feed, their graph, their ads.

Snapcard puts you there.

Your network lives as:

  • Your contacts.
  • Your notes.
  • Your tags.
  • Your map of where and when you met.

The app does not try to become another social network.
It wedges itself in the narrow gap between “we just met” and “we actually know each other.”

That gap is small in time and large in consequence.
It is where clients are lost, mentors drift, and friends vanish into the white noise of life.


A Different Answer to the Same Old Question

Every tool in this space answers the same question:

“How do I collect more contacts?”

Snapcard asks a different one:

“How do I keep the right ones alive?”

If you want more names in a list, there are plenty of products for that.
If you want your contact book to be something other than a graveyard, you need memory, not volume.

You need a second brain that remembers the room, the city, the story, and the promise you made to yourself as you walked away.

That is what Snapcard is.
Not a business card.
A quiet, private, spatial memory for your working life.