I just passed my final exam for licensure and want to flaunt my new bling in my email signature but I am afraid all of the letters and dots are a bit much. Does anybody have an elegant way to display their titles (or a funny one)?
my two choices so far are:
1.
Space Ghost Architect, LEED A.P.
Firm Name
Firm Address
Phone
Fax
2.
Space Ghost, LEED A.P.
Registered Architect
Firm Name
Firm Address
Phone
Fax
citizen
Oct 23, 09 6:30 pm
Yours truly,
Citizen
.....................................
Citizen, PhD, AIA, LEED AP
won and done williams
Oct 23, 09 7:41 pm
space ghost, RA
no one cares that you are a leed ap, because everyone is a leed ap. leave it for your resume.
aceclubs
Oct 23, 09 8:11 pm
agree with jaf..
LEED AP is clunky and looks bad.
btw: the correct designation is "LEED AP"
not "LEED A.P."
not "LEED(r) AP" (I hate it when ppl do this)
Read GBCI guidelines
****melt
Oct 23, 09 9:51 pm
I did what citizen did. Everybody and their brother might be LEED AP but hell, I paid good money for those extra damn letters so its for damn sure I'm going to flaunt it.
liberty bell
Oct 23, 09 11:49 pm
I go with:
liberty bell RA sometimes
liberty bell AIA sometimes (less often lately)
and
liberty bell RA, AIA when I'm feeling tough
I'm not LEEDed.
I think the important aspect of citizen's method is that you put the thing that is hardest to get first.
citizen
Oct 24, 09 12:27 am
Yes, ****melt is correct, I think.
We all work very hard for (most of) our credentials. Plus, I'm on the job market, and every little bit may help, who knows...
I would suggest putting the firm name first unless you own the firm. I got into this the other day with someone else and they brought this idea on the table.
They said that the proper thing to do is the finish your e-mail as a regular letter and then put an additional signature underneath that. Technically, if you wrote your letter right... the signature is redundant.
The C/O thing is muy importante because postal carriers are now and have been stingy about non-addressed recipients picking up or receiving mail outside of the box.
holz.box
Oct 24, 09 1:26 am
i don't rock the LEED AP because it's retarded and while i consider myself an architect interested in sustainable projects, i friggin despise LEED. it's retarded.
some person
Oct 24, 09 11:22 am
Does anyone else cringe at the double signature?
[blah blah blah content of email]
Thank you,
Just Why (<---- the cringe-able part. Just leave it off!)
Just Why, RA, LEED AP
Firm
Firm Address & Contact Info
Tag Line
Legal Statement
Please Consider the Environment statement
(Email signatures are becoming TOOOOO long!)
****melt
Oct 24, 09 11:49 am
Just Why - that's why I acutally don't "sign" my emails.
holz - I agree with you amd although there are two other LEED APs in my office, I'm the "go to" girl. Everyone comes to me when they have questions, even the other two. I also have it in my signature because I am the USGBC contact and (when I'm actually have a project) I am in constant contact with the clients and reps.
Really when it comes down to it, just add what you feel comfortable with.
binary
Oct 24, 09 4:41 pm
hottness
865.7309
ww.hottness.kom
...not sent via. blckbery/ifone/etchasketch-app......
brian buchalski
Oct 24, 09 5:30 pm
i usually sign off as...
st. puddles
after achieving sainthood, all the other credentials just feel kind of meaningless
snook_dude
Oct 24, 09 6:02 pm
I always sign off: "Master Architect"
vvvijay
Oct 25, 09 9:13 am
"Master Architect To The Stars"
proto
May 6, 21 1:02 pm
proto
kangaroo/structural goat-herd
Miles Jaffe
May 6, 21 2:45 pm
a 57 paragraph TOS and disclaimer
Wood Guy
May 6, 21 2:49 pm
Typically, something like:
Thank you,
Wood
Wood Guy
he/him
woodguydesign.com
prettygoodhouse.org
bsandbeershow.org
phone #
randomised
May 6, 21 3:41 pm
Why the he/him when you’re the wood GUY?
Wood Guy
May 6, 21 3:49 pm
Haha, excellent question. My real name is Mike which is not much more androgynous. I do it to support my friends and family members who are trans and for whom the assumed pronouns are not always accurate. And also for those who have androgynous names. I have several males and females named Jesse in my circle right now.
I was once confused for a woman in person, but I was young, slim and had long hair in a ponytail. Anyone who confuses older, fatter, balder me for a woman needs their eyes fixed. But it was definitely weird to be called "miss." And not just a quick misunderstanding--this was after talking for some time. An old guy at a diner somewhere in Montana.
randomised
May 8, 21 6:26 pm
And an excellent answer!
Non Sequitur
May 6, 21 3:44 pm
something along the lines of
NS + many letters
Coffee Consumption Architect
Slayer of Hopes and Dreams
Motherfucking Sorcerer
email
randomised
May 6, 21 3:51 pm
#0000FF
RJ87
May 6, 21 4:48 pm
Best,
RJ 87, AIA, NCARB
Architect I Project Coordinator
Company Name, LLC
Company Address
Phone Number
Little Square you click that takes you to our website & little square that takes you to my LinkedIn.
When I type it out like that it looks like it would be clunky but I've made my 14 font, AIA & NCARB 9 font, & the rest standard 11. It ends up being pretty a neat box of text. As far as other letters that aren't architecture license related go, when I first got my license our firms principle told me "The other letter's are so people don't feel bad about themselves if they're not licensed, the only title that matters is Architect." It's kind of stuck with me so I don't include LEED or CID.
To be perfectly honest, I only include AIA because at the time I wanted letters after my name. They don't matter either.
RJ87
May 6, 21 5:03 pm
*Made my name 14 font
newguy
May 6, 21 6:05 pm
Name
Company Name
Company address/number/etc
No titles, no rank, no credentials. you can determine the importance of the email/request/response by the content within the email. Or not, whatever.
ivanmillya
May 7, 21 8:22 am
IvanMillya Registered Architect e. [email protected] o. 123.456.789 c. 987.654.321
Firm Name & Info Yadda Yadda
It's too long, but it's scripted so everyone in our firm has the same basic signature. I added my cell number because I'm a glutton for punishment.
I just passed my final exam for licensure and want to flaunt my new bling in my email signature but I am afraid all of the letters and dots are a bit much. Does anybody have an elegant way to display their titles (or a funny one)?
my two choices so far are:
1.
Space Ghost Architect, LEED A.P.
Firm Name
Firm Address
Phone
Fax
2.
Space Ghost, LEED A.P.
Registered Architect
Firm Name
Firm Address
Phone
Fax
Yours truly,
Citizen
.....................................
Citizen, PhD, AIA, LEED AP
space ghost, RA
no one cares that you are a leed ap, because everyone is a leed ap. leave it for your resume.
agree with jaf..
LEED AP is clunky and looks bad.
btw: the correct designation is "LEED AP"
not "LEED A.P."
not "LEED(r) AP" (I hate it when ppl do this)
Read GBCI guidelines
I did what citizen did. Everybody and their brother might be LEED AP but hell, I paid good money for those extra damn letters so its for damn sure I'm going to flaunt it.
I go with:
liberty bell RA sometimes
liberty bell AIA sometimes (less often lately)
and
liberty bell RA, AIA when I'm feeling tough
I'm not LEEDed.
I think the important aspect of citizen's method is that you put the thing that is hardest to get first.
Yes, ****melt is correct, I think.
We all work very hard for (most of) our credentials. Plus, I'm on the job market, and every little bit may help, who knows...
I might suggest--
Firm Name
Space Ghost, PhD, RA, LEED AP
Firm Address
C/O: Mail Clerk / Secretary / Whoever else
E-Mail
Phone
Fax
I would suggest putting the firm name first unless you own the firm. I got into this the other day with someone else and they brought this idea on the table.
They said that the proper thing to do is the finish your e-mail as a regular letter and then put an additional signature underneath that. Technically, if you wrote your letter right... the signature is redundant.
The C/O thing is muy importante because postal carriers are now and have been stingy about non-addressed recipients picking up or receiving mail outside of the box.
i don't rock the LEED AP because it's retarded and while i consider myself an architect interested in sustainable projects, i friggin despise LEED. it's retarded.
Does anyone else cringe at the double signature?
[blah blah blah content of email]
Thank you,
Just Why (<---- the cringe-able part. Just leave it off!)
Just Why, RA, LEED AP
Firm
Firm Address & Contact Info
Tag Line
Legal Statement
Please Consider the Environment statement
(Email signatures are becoming TOOOOO long!)
Just Why - that's why I acutally don't "sign" my emails.
holz - I agree with you amd although there are two other LEED APs in my office, I'm the "go to" girl. Everyone comes to me when they have questions, even the other two. I also have it in my signature because I am the USGBC contact and (when I'm actually have a project) I am in constant contact with the clients and reps.
Really when it comes down to it, just add what you feel comfortable with.
hottness
865.7309
ww.hottness.kom
...not sent via. blckbery/ifone/etchasketch-app......
i usually sign off as...
st. puddles
after achieving sainthood, all the other credentials just feel kind of meaningless
I always sign off: "Master Architect"
"Master Architect To The Stars"
proto
kangaroo/structural goat-herd
a 57 paragraph TOS and disclaimer
Typically, something like:
Thank you,
Wood
Wood Guy
he/him
woodguydesign.com
prettygoodhouse.org
bsandbeershow.org
phone #
Why the he/him when you’re the wood GUY?
Haha, excellent question. My real name is Mike which is not much more androgynous. I do it to support my friends and family members who are trans and for whom the assumed pronouns are not always accurate. And also for those who have androgynous names. I have several males and females named Jesse in my circle right now.
I was once confused for a woman in person, but I was young, slim and had long hair in a ponytail. Anyone who confuses older, fatter, balder me for a woman needs their eyes fixed. But it was definitely weird to be called "miss." And not just a quick misunderstanding--this was after talking for some time. An old guy at a diner somewhere in Montana.
And an excellent answer!
something along the lines of
#0000FF
Best,
RJ 87, AIA, NCARB
Architect I Project Coordinator
Company Name, LLC
Company Address
Phone Number
Little Square you click that takes you to our website & little square that takes you to my LinkedIn.
When I type it out like that it looks like it would be clunky but I've made my 14 font, AIA & NCARB 9 font, & the rest standard 11. It ends up being pretty a neat box of text. As far as other letters that aren't architecture license related go, when I first got my license our firms principle told me "The other letter's are so people don't feel bad about themselves if they're not licensed, the only title that matters is Architect." It's kind of stuck with me so I don't include LEED or CID.
To be perfectly honest, I only include AIA because at the time I wanted letters after my name. They don't matter either.
*Made my name 14 font
Name
Company Name
Company address/number/etc
No titles, no rank, no credentials. you can determine the importance of the email/request/response by the content within the email. Or not, whatever.
IvanMillya
Registered Architect
e. [email protected]
o. 123.456.789
c. 987.654.321
Firm Name & Info Yadda Yadda
It's too long, but it's scripted so everyone in our firm has the same basic signature. I added my cell number because I'm a glutton for punishment.
Kind regards,
Jaette
Professional membership title and letters
Company name
Company add.
Contact phone
Contact email