How do I put my own brand on approvals?
When a held tool call notifies a reviewer, that email or chat message and the page they click through to can carry your company's identity instead of Enforgate's — useful when the approver is your customer or an internal team that should never see a third-party vendor's name.
What gets branded
With white-label enabled for an organization, your identity replaces Enforgate's on:
- Approval notification emails — subject line, sender name, logo, and accent color.
- Slack, Microsoft Teams, and Telegram approval messages.
- The public approve/deny pages a reviewer opens from a notification link.
The fields you can set:
- Display name— the company name shown on every approval (e.g. your brand, not “Enforgate”).
- Logo and primary color — used in the email header, notification cards, and approval pages.
- Approval sender name and support email — the from-name on emails and the contact line in the footer.
- Custom domain — serve approval links from your own domain (DNS-verified).
Sensible fallback
Branding resolves per field: anything you leave blank falls back to the Enforgate default, and when white-label is turned off entirely, everything reverts to full Enforgate branding with attribution. There is one source of truth for this resolution, shared by the gateway (which renders the notifications) and the dashboard preview — so what you see in the preview is exactly what your reviewers receive.
Turning it on
Configure branding under Settings → Branding (admin only). A live preview mirrors the real approval card as you edit the name, logo, color, and sender. White-label is a paid-plan feature, so enabling the toggle is gated to Pro and Scale — see plans and billing.
Branding changes what a notification looks like, never who receives it or what the policy decides. To control recipients, see notification configs and approval routing.
