How to Create QR Codes for Business
A practical workflow for teams: choose the right payload, design for reliable scans, place codes where people expect them, and keep destinations maintained.
Start with the job, not the code
Before you generate anything, write down what a successful scan should accomplish. Are you sending someone to a product page, a feedback form, a PDF menu, or a payment screen? The QR code is only the shortcut—the destination must load quickly on mobile, match the promise on your poster, and stay online for as long as the printed material lasts.
Pick the payload that matches your process
For marketing and web traffic, a URL QR code is the default. Use HTTPS links, avoid redirect chains when possible, and test the landing page on a mid-range phone on cellular data—not only on office WiFi. For contact handoffs at events, email and phone QR codes reduce typing errors. For guest WiFi in a store or office, WiFi QR codes remove password friction; rotate the printed code if you change the network password.
If you need a code that never changes on paper but the campaign destination might, you have two honest options: accept reprints with a new static code, or use a dynamic QR service that hosts a redirect (usually paid) so you can swap the target in a dashboard. We compare trade-offs in Static vs Dynamic QR codes.
Design so real phones can read it
Contrast beats creativity when reliability matters. Dark modules on a light background still scan most consistently. If you use brand colors, print a small test sheet and scan in daylight and under store lighting. Keep logos small relative to the full code, raise error correction if you obscure part of the pattern, and leave quiet space around the code so cameras can find the corner markers.
Size scales with distance: a code on a tabletop tent can be smaller than one on a billboard. When in doubt, enlarge slightly—failed scans erode trust faster than a slightly oversized code.
Roll out with clear labeling
Pair the image with a short line of text: what happens after the scan, and why it helps the customer. That single sentence prevents hesitation and reduces mistaken scans from people who assumed the code did something else. Train frontline staff to help anyone who cannot use a camera phone so the experience stays inclusive.
Maintain and measure what you can
Assign someone to check links quarterly, especially on seasonal packaging or event signage. Broken destinations are one of the fastest ways to waste print spend. If you use analytics on your website, tag campaign URLs so you can tell QR-driven visits apart from other traffic—without that, you are guessing.
Create the actual code
When you are ready to build a static code for URLs, text, WiFi, email, or phone, use our free QR code generator in the browser, preview the result, then export PNG for digital or SVG for crisp print. For more context on formats and troubleshooting, see our guide to QR code types and fixes when a code will not scan.
About the author
Codzee Team builds free online tools and writes guides to help individuals and small businesses use QR codes and barcodes effectively. We focus on privacy-first, no-signup tools and practical content you can use right away. Learn more on our About page or reach us via Contact.
Tags
Related Articles
QR Code Uses in 2025
Where QR codes show up in 2025: retail, hospitality, field service, events, and public services—and what “good” looks like for each.
Are QR Codes Safe?
QR codes are neither safe nor unsafe by themselves. Learn how phishing overlaps with QR, what to check before you scan, and how businesses reduce risk for customers.
Best QR Code Generator Tools: A Comparison
How to compare QR generators: static vs hosted, privacy, export formats, analytics, pricing, and when a simple free tool is enough.