QR funnels for real-world marketing

Turn every scan into a lead, order, or follow-up.

QRFunnels helps local businesses connect postcards, menus, flyers, signs, business cards, and ads to mobile landing pages that capture leads, route people to WhatsApp, and make follow-up easier.

Postcards Restaurant Menus Real Estate Contractors WhatsApp Orders
Demo: Local Restaurant Menu Scan → choose items → send order to WhatsApp
Chicken Sandwich Grilled chicken, sauce, fries
$12
Family Pizza Large pizza, 2 toppings
$18
Fresh Lemonade House-made drink
$4

Use the same idea for menus, postcards, service offers, listings, reviews, and appointment requests.

Offline attention should not end with a dead link.

A QR code by itself is only a doorway. The page behind it needs to explain the offer, collect the right information, and help the business respond while the prospect is still interested.

Create the QR funnel

Build a simple mobile page for a menu, service offer, listing, event, review request, or lead form.

Put it on real marketing

Add the QR code to postcards, flyers, signs, business cards, invoices, door hangers, or restaurant tables.

Capture the next action

Send people to a form, WhatsApp order, booking page, phone call, review request, or follow-up workflow.

What usually happens

  • Postcards get attention, but the next step is unclear.
  • Menus and flyers send people to generic pages that do not convert.
  • Business owners miss calls, messages, and follow-up opportunities.
  • Nobody knows which printed piece created the lead.

What QRFunnels is built to fix

  • Every scan opens a focused landing page with one clear action.
  • Leads, orders, and inquiries can be captured from the phone.
  • Businesses can test different offers without reprinting everything.
  • QR campaigns become easier to track, improve, and repeat.

Built for local businesses that market in the real world.

QRFunnels can support simple digital cards, but its stronger use is connecting physical marketing to practical lead capture.

Home-service businesses

Put a QR code on postcards, yard signs, invoices, and flyers. Send prospects to a service-specific page where they can request an estimate, describe the job, upload photos, or call the business directly.

Estimate what weak follow-up may be costing you.

This simple calculator is not a promise of results. It is a planning tool to show why the page after the scan matters.

Estimated monthly leads 20
Estimated monthly customers 4
Estimated monthly opportunity $3,000
$36,000 possible yearly opportunity

Use realistic numbers. The goal is not hype — it is clarity.

What you can build with QRFunnels

Start simple. Create one funnel, test it with one campaign, then reuse the pattern.

📬

Postcard funnels

Send recipients to a focused landing page instead of hoping they manually type a website later.

🍽️

QR restaurant menus

Let customers scan, view items, and move toward a WhatsApp order or inquiry from their phone.

🏡

Real estate campaigns

Use QR pages for listings, open houses, seller-lead postcards, neighborhood farming, and buyer inquiries.

🔧

Contractor lead capture

Collect project type, location, timeline, photos, and contact details before the first call.

Review funnels

Make review requests easier after a service visit, appointment, delivery, or completed project.

👤

Digital business cards

Share contact information quickly and update it without reprinting paper cards.

Your QR code should do more than open a page.

It should guide the visitor to the next step: request an estimate, place an order, book a showing, leave a review, save your contact, or start a conversation.

No fake promises. Build one funnel, test it, improve it, then repeat.

Viber QR Code Generator

What is a QR code?

You've probably noticed a square barcode pasted to a graffitied light pole or on the back of a business card.

That pixelated code, shaped in a square, is called a QR code. They help you download apps, give you contactless access to a restaurant's menu, can be found on marketing billboards, and on websites or social media to promote items and deals.

Despite being a mid-90s invention, the QR code didn't gain real momentum until the era of smartphones. Mobile devices allowed the digital mark to be used in more dynamic and diverse ways, making it an easy — and in the era of a pandemic, contactless — way to connect to and share information.

Here's what you need to know about QR codes.

Invented in 1994 by Masahiro Hara, chief engineer of Denso Wave, a Japanese company and subsidiary of Toyota, the QR code was initially used to track vehicles and parts as they moved through the manufacturing process.

Short for Quick Response, QR codes are a type of barcode easily readable with digital devices like smartphones. They store information as a series of pixels in a square grid that can be read in two directions — top to bottom and right to left — unlike standard barcodes that can only be read top to bottom.

QR codes can store about 7,000 digits or around 4,000 characters, including punctuation and special characters. It can also encode information like phone numbers or internet addresses. The arrangement of each QR code varies depending on the information it contains, and that changes the arrangement of its black modules.