The 7-Second Rule
Research shows people form first impressions within 7 seconds. In email, that impression starts with the subject line and ends with your signature. A polished, professional signature creates an unconscious "halo effect" — the recipient perceives your entire message as more credible, competent, and trustworthy.
What Your Signature Signals
Professional Signature
Signals: Organised, credible, established, trustworthy, detail-oriented. "This person runs a real business."
No Signature
Signals: Casual, possibly inexperienced, didn't bother. "Is this a legitimate business?"
Over-the-Top Signature
Signals: Try-hard, cluttered, distracting. Inspirational quotes and rainbow colours scream "amateur".
"Sent from my iPhone"
Signals: Busy, on-the-go — but also shortcuts. Excuses low-effort replies. Remove it.
The Reciprocity Principle
When you provide useful information in your signature (phone number, booking link, website), you're giving before asking. This triggers the psychological principle of reciprocity — people feel inclined to reciprocate by engaging with you.
Authority Bias
Titles, qualifications, and credentials in your signature trigger authority bias. "Dr.", "CPA", "FAIA" — these signals make recipients more likely to trust your expertise and follow your recommendations.
Social Proof
Social media links with strong followings, testimonials, or "500+ clients served" in your signature provide social proof. Recipients think: "Others trust them, so I can too."
The Mere Exposure Effect
Every email exposes the recipient to your branding. Over time, this familiarity breeds comfort and preference. Consistent signatures across your team multiply this effect — by the time a prospect is ready to buy, your brand feels familiar and safe.
🧠 Psychology-optimised: Our templates are designed using these principles — clean, credible, and conversion-focused. Create your signature →