Custom links
Point visitors anywhere — a portfolio, a booking page, a price list. Up to twenty.
A custom link is a row on your public card with two parts — words to read, an address to open. The Links panel of the Kard editor manages them, and every look renders them: the Default layout lists them under "Links"; Letterhead files them under "Index" and Jharokha under "Catalogue & Trade", sharing the shelf with your documents. Same rows, different dress.
Add one
- Open the Kard editor — Kards → Edit Kard — and scroll to Links.
- Press "Add link". A row appears with two fields, Title and URL — both required.
- Fill Title with words worth tapping — "Book a table", "Winter price list" — and URL with the full address.
- Press "Update Kard".
The URL needs its scheme: https://example.com passes, a bare example.com is rejected before the card saves. Copy the address from your browser's address bar and the https:// rides along.
A card holds up to 20 links. To drop one, press the trash icon on its row ("Remove this link") — the row clears at once, but the deletion is real only when you save. Leave the page without saving and the link survives. Save it, and the link's click history is deleted with it — the counts do not come back.
Spend the rows on the things people ask about anyway: where to book, what it costs, what the work looks like. A row that answers a question a visitor was about to type — the price list, the catalogue, the calendar — saves both of you a message. And twenty rows is more card than most businesses need; if you find yourself running out, point one row at your website and let it do the sprawling.
Taps are counted
Every visitor tap on a custom link is recorded as a link click — counting runs on every plan, with nothing to switch on. On paid plans, the Analytics tab breaks the clicks out row by row, so you can see which links earn their place and which never get touched. The course on What gets counted covers what is measured and how.
One distinction worth keeping: links point away from the card, documents travel with it. A PDF price list with no home on the web can ride on the card itself — see Attach documents.