short links, explained
Static vs dynamic QR codes
Why a short link turns a permanent, one-shot code into something you can re-aim and measure.
First — what’s a “short link”?
A short link is a tiny web address that quietly forwards to a longer one. You paste your real (often long and messy) URL into a free service and it hands back something neat like tiny.one/menu. Tap it, and you land in exactly the same place. Three reasons that matters here:
- Fewer characters, cleaner code. Less to store means a sparser grid with bigger squares — quicker and far more reliable to scan.
- You can change where it points. The printed code stays the same forever, but you can re-aim the short link at a new page whenever you like.
- You can see the scans. Most shorteners count every visit, so you actually learn whether anyone used it.
So which is “dynamic”?
A plain QR code holds your URL directly — it’s static. Once it’s printed, the destination is fixed forever. Point the code at a short link instead and it becomes dynamic in practice: the printed squares never change, but the short link can be re-aimed at a new page whenever you like.
Pro tip
Printing it? Always run it through a short link first. Reprinting a flyer because a URL changed is painful — re-aiming a short link takes about ten seconds.