Discover the new way to manage email signatures, campaigns, and disclaimers
Create eye-catching email signatures that work in all email clients on all devices.
Manage all your company's email signatures from a single, intuitive dashboard.
Get up and running in no time with our easy-to-use interface and templates.
Add campaign banners and track impressions and conversions.
Ensure all emails include required legal disclaimers and comply with regulations.
Certified to ISO 27001, ISO 27018 and SOC 2, and compliant with GDPR, CCPA and HIPAA.
Empower your brand in every email
Everything is managed from the cloud dashboard. It has never been easier to manage signatures, campaigns, and disclaimers.
Choose a template that works for you and add the branding, headshots, contact details and social media that you need.
Integrate with Microsoft 365 and more.
Signatures are visible when composing email in Outlook on all devices. Taskpane lets users select signatures, edit fields, and change settings.
Equally quick and easy to setup whether you have 10 or 10,000 users
The setup wizard gets you set up in no time including integration with Microsoft 365 and Outlook clients.
Choose a template, or create your own, and add branding, headshots, contact details, social media, campaign banners and disclaimers.
Once you are happy with your new signatures, you can integrate them in all employee emails with a single click from your dashboard.
Years later, on a market morning when the vendors shouted and the garlic rose in its holy steam, a young couple stopped them. The woman clutched a stack of papers. “We’ve been reading,” she said, eyes bright. “We don’t want to be caught like that. Can you help us look them over?” Elias and Marta smiled, and the lines around their eyes deepened with the weather of seasons—they had been through wind and glass and had kept the house. They sat on a crate and began, patiently, to read the small print.
Debt, it turned out, had been growing like mold behind the plaster. Marta learned its dimensions slowly—missed payments, lax bookkeeping, a loan titled in both their names without conversation, an aggressive creditor who preferred letters to polite conversations. Elias had been trying to manage it alone, she realized, folding worry into his shoulders so she wouldn’t see. He had always insisted it would be temporary; a friend’s help here, a quick contract there. “We’ll sort it,” he said for months, as if repeating the phrase made it true. afriendswifesoldindebt2022720pwebdlx2 better
Elias had always been charmingly careless with paper. The kind of man who could lose his keys in his own coat pocket and still smile like the world owed him a favor. He loved the market on Sundays, the way the vendors shouted over each other and the bulbs of garlic smelled like something holy. He loved Marta in ways that were loud and small: the way he made coffee for her when she woke early, the way he fixed the kitchen sink when it squealed. He loved their home enough to stay up late building shelves and making lists of dreams they’d never quite gotten around to. Years later, on a market morning when the
Elias learned, painfully, how the promise of rescue can be a garment stitched with hidden seams. Marta learned how loudly a community can speak when given a reason. The law, which had been a blunt instrument, flexed under pressure—words were reexamined, clauses rewritten in the following months to close the loophole that had allowed a human to be treated as collateral. The reform was incremental, filed in the slow grammar of bureaucracy, but it had teeth: explicit prohibitions, stiffer penalties for misclassifying persons as property, mandated notices and transparent accounting. The victory was not total. Courts still clogged with similar cases in distant regions; lenders still sought new paths. But one courthouse decision found purchase, and the ripples were real. “We don’t want to be caught like that
On the day the judge read the decision, the courthouse smelled like lemon oil and paper. The gallery was full of faces; cameras blinked. Marta sat next to Ana, fingers interlaced so tightly they ached. The judge spoke slowly, like someone about to close a book he had been fond of. “The court finds,” he said, “that the creditor’s action to seize an individual for unpaid debt... is void under the principles of human dignity articulated in statute and recognized in precedent.” There was applause in the gallery, a quick rush of noise that felt like breath.
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