Stop using one Signature for everything

Your signature is not just a design it’s your legal identity. Every time you sign, you’re saying: “I agree. I accept. I am bound.”

Stop using one Signature for everything

Stop using one Signature for everything

Your signature is not just a design it’s your legal identity. Every time you sign, you’re saying: “I agree. I accept. I am bound.”

That’s why the law treats your signature as strong evidence of consent, approval, and authorization.

But here’s where many people make a dangerous mistake. They use one signature for everything from serious legal contracts to casual letters, parcel pickups, and even attendance sheets.

Let me tell you the problem.

When you use the same signature across all kinds of documents, you make forgery easier and deniability harder. Anyone who has seen your signature in an informal setting a friend, co-worker, or clerk can easily copy it and use it on a legal document. And because it matches your usual signature, you may find yourself struggling to disprove it.

In law, the burden can shift quickly. Once a signature appears on a document, the presumption is that you signed it unless you can prove otherwise. Imagine trying to convince a judge that a signature identical to yours was “faked” by someone who had seen it a hundred times before.

That’s why smart people especially professionals, business owners, and those who sign documents often use different categories of signatures.

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