<p>Contact information, for the most part, is handled automatically by the vast majority of email clients. Outlook 2010, Gmail, Hotmail, Windows Live Mail and the rest tend to auto-populate contact information based on the sender's information. In most cases, these clients do a good jobbut if you want a bit more control of how your contact information shows up in your recipients' address books, your best bet is to create a business card signature with Outlook 2010.</p><p>With an Outlook business card signature (aka a vCard or .vcf file), your contact information is delivered along with your email in a tidy package that populates address book contacts more precisely and more completely. Plus, they give a professional look and feel to your business emails and win you points with any Outlook junkies that you'll be corresponding with. In this groovy How-to, I'll show you how to create professional-looking business card signatures in Outlook 2010 in just a few minutes.Article MapCreate a contact for yourselfEditing the contact information on your Outlook 2010 business cardCustomize look and feel of your business cardAttaching business cards as signatures in Outlook 2010Saving contact information from a business cardCreate a Contact For Yourself</p><p>Business cards in Outlook 2010 begin as contacts. So, you're first step is to create a contact for yourself, if you haven't done so already.Step 1</p><p>Launch Outlook 2010.Step 2</p><p><a href="http://www.groovypost.com/howto/howto/create-a-business-card-signature-in-outlook-2010/">Keep reading...</a></p>