Electronic Signature Workflow: Complete Guide
Design a high-performing signature workflow: order, roles, reminders, integrations, mistakes to avoid.
Certyneo Team
Editor — Certyneo · About Certyneo
What is an electronic signature workflow
An electronic signature workflow is the sequence of organised steps leading to the signing of a document: order of signatories, conditions, reminders, notifications. The more the workflow is tailored to your process, the faster signatures are completed.
The two main types of order
Parallel order
All signatories receive the envelope at the same time and can sign independently.
Advantages: speed, no bottleneck. Use cases: mutual NDA, bilateral contract where order doesn't matter.
Sequential order
Each signatory signs after the previous one. The envelope progresses signatory by signatory.
Advantages: respect for validation hierarchies, each stakeholder sees previous validations. Use cases: contracts involving manager then director approval, leases with guarantor.
Typical roles
- Signatory: places their signature on the document
- Approver: validates without signing (validation chain)
- CC (Carbon Copy): receives the final document without signing
- Sender: the originator, often also a signatory
Reminders and notifications
A modern platform allows you to set:
- frequency and number of reminders to signatories
- real-time notifications to the sender (email, Slack, Teams)
- webhooks to feed a CRM/ERP
- internal reminders if blocked
Expiration and cancellation
Always set an expiration date (typically 15-30 days). An expired envelope is automatically archived as "unsigned", freeing up your dashboard.
During the process, the sender can also manually cancel an envelope (revocation), useful if an error is discovered.
Integrations
A powerful workflow integrates with your tools:
- CRM: trigger sending when a deal moves to "closed won"
- HRIS: send the contract when a candidate moves to "hired"
- ERP: generate the purchase order when a quote is accepted
- Custom webhooks: notify your internal systems
Design best practices
- Minimise the number of signatories (each additional person lengthens the cycle)
- Clarify roles (signatory vs approver)
- Automate reminders
- Plan a backup in case of refusal
- Test the workflow before volume deployment
Common mistakes
- Sequential order by default when parallel would be faster
- Too many signatories (some are just "CC'd")
- No expiration date
- No integration → manual re-entry
- Insufficient notifications to signatories
Real case: multi-party contract
A partnership contract between 3 companies. Optimised workflow:
- PDF preparation by company A
- Sending in parallel order to the 3 signatories (one per company)
- Auto reminder Day+3 if unsigned
- All signatories notified in real time
- Webhook triggers partnership account opening as soon as last signature is received
Total cycle: 24-48 hours vs 2-3 weeks on paper.
How Certyneo helps you
Certyneo allows you to design flexible workflows: parallel, sequential, mixed, approvers, CC, customisable reminders, custom webhooks, native CRM/HRIS/ERP integrations. Visual editor to configure without code.
Discover the Certyneo electronic signature solution
FAQ
When should you use sequential order?
When one validation must precede the next (manager → director → final contract).
How many signatories maximum?
Technically unlimited. Beyond 5-6, the cycle lengthens significantly.
Can you mix parallel and sequential order?
Yes with "mixed" workflows: chained parallel groups.
How do you handle an absent signatory?
Reassign to another authorised signatory, or defer the envelope.
Are webhooks real-time?
Yes, triggered at each change in envelope status.
Conclusion
Designing a good workflow is the difference between a tool that works and a tool that transforms. Spend 30 minutes designing your ideal workflow, you'll save months of friction.
Try Certyneo to send, sign and track your documents online simply, quickly and securely.
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Go deeper
Reference articles on this topic.
Go deeper
Our comprehensive guides to master electronic signature.
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