Email Contains Verification Reference

The customer receives an email with sensitive instructions (bank details, payment info, etc.) from their solicitor. The email includes a clear verification snippet that directs them to verify the information authenticity.

📧 Scenario

Sarah Mitchell is purchasing a property. She receives completion payment instructions from her solicitor, David Thompson at Shepherd+Wedderburn.

💡 What the Customer Sees

✉️

Normal Email Content

The email contains all the usual information—bank details, instructions, amounts. Nothing changes in how solicitors write emails.

🔐

Verification Snippet

A clearly marked section at the bottom tells the customer: "Verify these instructions on our website before acting."

🎯

Clear Instructions

Step-by-step guidance: visit the firm's website, enter the reference code, get instant confirmation.

🛡️

Security First

The snippet emphasizes: "Don't just trust the email"—verify on the firm's official domain before transferring money.

🔄 The Trust Shift

❌ Before Undoubt

  • Customer trusts the email blindly
  • No way to verify authenticity
  • Vulnerable to phishing attacks
  • Fear and uncertainty

✅ With Undoubt

  • Customer verifies on firm's website
  • Cryptographic proof of authenticity
  • Phishing sites cannot fake it
  • Confidence and peace of mind