Social Media Links

Add social media profiles to email signatures with customizable display options. Recipients can click these links to connect with your team on professional and social platforms.

Written By Matt Sywulak

Last updated 4 months ago

How It Works

Enable "Include block of social media links" to add a section displaying your organization's social media profiles. These links appear in signatures based on your layout configuration—typically at the bottom of full signatures for new mail.

Social links can pull from company-wide settings (like your corporate Twitter or LinkedIn page) or from individual user profiles if configured in the User Field Configuration section.

Adding Social Platforms

Click "Add new platform" to open a dropdown menu of supported social networks. Common platforms include:

  • LinkedIn

  • Twitter (X)

  • Facebook

  • Instagram

  • YouTube

  • GitHub

  • TikTok

  • And many others

After selecting a platform, you'll enter the profile URL or username. Add as many platforms as your organization actively uses.

Social media link prefix: Use this field to add a common prefix to all social links, like your company name or brand handle. For example, if your prefix is "AcmeCorp", individual platform links might display as "AcmeCorp LinkedIn" or "AcmeCorp Twitter."

Display Options

Choose how social media links appear in signatures. The rendering style affects both visual design and how much space the links occupy.

Platform Name (Text Only)

Displays the platform name as clickable text:

LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook

Best for: Text-only email environments, maximum compatibility, or minimalist signatures. Some email clients strip images, making text links the most reliable option.

Pros: Works everywhere, loads fast, accessible Cons: Less visually engaging, harder to scan quickly

Icon Only

Shows platform icons without text:

[LinkedIn icon] [Twitter icon] [Facebook icon]

Best for: Clean, modern signatures with limited space. Icons are universally recognized and create visual interest.

Pros: Space-efficient, professional appearance, visually scannable Cons: Requires image support, may not display in all email clients

Icon @Username

Displays icon followed by the @ symbol and username/handle:

[LinkedIn icon] @JaneSmith [Twitter icon] @JaneSmith [Facebook icon] @AcmeCorp

Best for: Personal branding, social media-focused roles (marketing, community management), or when individual handles matter more than company profiles.

Pros: Shows personal identity, encourages direct connections Cons: Takes more space, may look cluttered with many platforms

Icon Username

Shows icon with username (no @ symbol):

[LinkedIn icon] JaneSmith [Twitter icon] JaneSmith [Facebook icon] AcmeCorp

Best for: Professional signatures where you want to identify the specific account but keep formatting cleaner than the @Username option.

Pros: Balanced between identification and space efficiency Cons: Still requires more space than icons alone

Platform: @Username

Text-based format showing platform name, colon, and @username:

LinkedIn: @JaneSmith | Twitter: @JaneSmith | Facebook: @AcmeCorp

Best for: Maximum clarity, formal communications, or when you need to ensure recipients know exactly which platform each link goes to.

Pros: Crystal clear, works without images, accessible Cons: Takes the most space, can look verbose

Platform: Username

Same as above but without the @ symbol:

LinkedIn: JaneSmith | Twitter: JaneSmith | Facebook: AcmeCorp

Best for: Professional contexts where handles don't typically use @ symbols (like LinkedIn) or when you want a cleaner text-only appearance.

Pros: Clear and professional, no image dependencies Cons: Uses significant vertical or horizontal space

Custom Icon Colors

Enable "Render social media icons in a single, custom color" to override default platform colors and use your brand color instead.

Default behavior: Each platform displays in its brand colors (LinkedIn blue, Twitter/X black, Facebook blue, etc.).

Custom color behavior: All icons render in the single color you specify, creating a unified, branded appearance.

When to use custom colors:

  • Match your company's brand palette

  • Create monochromatic signatures for formal industries (legal, finance)

  • Improve visual consistency across all signature elements

  • Ensure icons work with specific email signature backgrounds

When to keep default colors:

  • Platform recognition is more important than brand consistency

  • Your brand colors conflict with readability

  • You want social links to feel distinct from other signature elements

Best Practices

Limit platforms: Include only 3-5 actively maintained social profiles. More platforms create visual clutter and dilute engagement.

Prioritize by audience: B2B companies should prioritize LinkedIn. B2C or creative industries might emphasize Instagram or TikTok.

Keep profiles updated: Only include platforms your organization actively monitors. Dead or inactive profiles damage credibility.

Test display options: Preview signatures in multiple email clients before rolling out. Icon-based options may not render properly in some clients (like Outlook with images disabled).

Company vs. personal profiles: Decide whether signatures link to corporate accounts or individual employee profiles. Mixing both can confuse recipients.

Mobile compatibility: Icon-only or Icon Username options work best on mobile devices where space is limited.

Accessibility: If using icon-only display, ensure your email signature HTML includes alt text for screen readers (handled automatically by INKY).

Common Configurations

Corporate standard (company profiles only):

  • Display: Icon only

  • Platforms: LinkedIn, Twitter, YouTube

Custom "whitespace-normal break-words">Sales team (personal profiles):

  • Display: Icon @Username

  • Platforms: LinkedIn, Twitter

  • Default colors for platform recognition

Executive signatures (minimal, company only):

  • Display: Platform name (text)

  • Platforms: LinkedIn, Company blog

  • Placed in footer for subtle presence

Marketing team (multi-channel presence):

  • Display: Icon Username

  • Platforms: LinkedIn, Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube

  • Custom color for brand consistency

Support team (community-focused):

  • Display: Platform: Username

  • Platforms: LinkedIn, Twitter (for @support handle), Community forum

  • Default colors for clarity

Troubleshooting

Icons not displaying: Check that recipient's email client allows images. Provide a text-based fallback option in signature settings if icons are critical to your communication.

Links not clickable: Verify that URLs are complete and properly formatted. Some platforms require full URLs (https://linkedin.com/company/example) rather than just usernames.

Inconsistent spacing: Different rendering options create different spacing patterns. Preview signatures before deployment and adjust layout configuration if needed.

Wrong profiles appearing: Check whether links are pulling from company settings or individual user settings. Verify User Field Configuration if some users should have personal profiles while others use corporate accounts.