


Thunderbird maintains signatures in the settings for each account. This will bring up an interface for adding, editing and managing multiple signatures. In Microsoft Office’s Outlook (2016 in this case), in File, Options, Mail, click on the Signatures… button. Just type your signature as you’d like it to appear at the end of every message you compose. In Options, under Writing, Formatting, Font and signature is an option to define the signature you’d like. While a keyboard macro or other shortcut is one way to do so, many email programs have the ability to set up a signature automatically. That’s the standard signature I place at the bottom of many of my emails. I have a keyboard macro that automatically types the following for me: Leo A. Sometimes, their signature even includes their name. What’s a signature? It’s the title, company, phone number, fax number, email address, pithy quote, legal disclaimer, website URL, list of website URLs, call to action, and/or dashed line that many people put at the bottom of every message that they send.
