Brand colours, fonts and logos
Zoltan Wagner avatar
Written by Zoltan Wagner
Updated over a week ago

Brand colours, fonts and logos can be updated from the Branding tab of the Account Settings page.

Who can use brand controls?

Only account administrators can update brand settings.

Defining and locking brand colours and fonts and disabling default templates are not available with the Standard billing plan. Controlling your logo and the Envoke logo are available with all billing plans.

If you have multiple connected accounts with Envoke, set up as subaccounts, branding needs to be defined for each account separately.

Review of branding controls

1) Your logo

Upload your logo here. You can choose to display it on top of the email preferences page and the email archives page. See option 2 below.

2) Display logo and account name

Control whether your logo and/or your account name is shown on top of the email preferences page and the email archives page.

3) Show Envoke logo

Turn the Envoke logo on or off in the footer of email messages and at the bottom of the email preferences page and the email archives page.

4) Colours

Define your brand colours here. They will be shown in the colour picker in the email editor to make it easy for users to use them.

5) Fonts

Define your brand fonts here. They will be shown in the font selector in the email editor to make it easy for users to use them.

6) Lock styles

Locking fonts and colours prevents users from picking colours and fonts that aren't part of the predefined set of options chosen by administrator users in steps 4 and 5.

Limitations to locked styles:

  • Existing messages and templates will not be affected and may contain styles that aren't part of the brand colours defined in step 4.

  • Adding new buttons and links in the email editor appear in blue and new divers will be black regardless of brand colour locking. The colours of these elements can be changed later.

7) Disable system templates

By default all accounts have access to a variety of generic, built-in templates. Disabling access to these templates forces users to use a custom template created by an administrator and prevents (inadvertent) usage of non-branded, generic templates.

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