

Unfortunately, the link for mobile devices took me to a webpage with an image of my document that had been compressed so much that I couldn’t read any body text, either on my Android-powered smartphone or on my Google Nexus 7 Android tablet. The email that the system sends contains a general link and a link for mobile device users. Lots of signs on the wall: EchoSign shows you a dashboard of where documents are in the signature process.


You can see when documents were sent and the average time it took to receive them back. Recipients do not need to have EchoSign accounts they just have to click the link in the email sent by the system. Now the tracking, and the clock, begins: The website sends the document to your recipient and an email to you reporting that it has been sent, and then it sends you an email when the recipient either signs or refuses the document. If you’re already logged in to EchoSign, you simply enter your recipient’s email address, select a couple of options (email it back to you or fax it back to you), and click Send. You can send up to five documents a month with a free EchoSign account, or you can opt for account types that allow greater numbers of users and additional features-for example, corporate branding on all of your emails-at costs ranging from $15 per month to $400 per month.
Customizing toolbar in adobe acrobat 7 pro pro#
John Hancock here, please: After Acrobat XI Pro sends your document to EchoSign, just enter your addressee, a document name, a message, and click Send. Acrobat XI Pro uploads the document to and then directs you to complete the transaction there. Create your document in Acrobat XI Pro, then click the Sign button and then Send for Signature. The ability to sign documents digitally isn’t new, but now you can request, receive, and manage digital signatures using Adobe’s recently acquired EchoSign website.
