LT-TRM-26 Terms of use
Terms & conditions
The terms for using this website and the client portal. Client engagements are governed by a signed services agreement, not this page.
Last updated 12 July 2026
1. Who these terms cover
These terms apply to this website (linkthink.co.uk) and to the Link Think Portal (sign.linkthink.co.uk), both operated by Link Think Ltd, company number 16226636, registered in England and Wales ("we", "us"). By using either, you accept these terms.
2. Client engagements are separate
Work we do for clients is governed by a services agreement signed electronically through the portal by both parties. If anything on this website conflicts with a signed agreement, the signed agreement wins.
3. The website
Content on this site is provided in good faith for general information. It is not professional advice, and market figures shown are illustrative unless a source is stated. We may change or remove content at any time. All content, design and marks are owned by Link Think Ltd; do not reproduce them commercially without written permission.
4. The portal
Portal links are private to their recipient. Do not share your proposal link; anyone with it can view your proposal. Electronic signatures made in the portal are intended to be legally binding and are recorded with time, document fingerprint, IP address and device details. Payments are processed by Revolut under their terms. Account connections (Google, LinkedIn) are optional, used only as described on the portal overview, and revocable at any time.
5. Acceptable use
Do not attempt to access other clients' data, probe or disrupt the service, or use it for anything unlawful. We may suspend access to protect the service or its users.
6. Liability
Nothing in these terms limits liability that cannot lawfully be limited. Subject to that, the website and portal are provided as available, and our total liability arising from your use of them (as distinct from a signed services agreement, which has its own terms) is limited to £100.
7. General
These terms are governed by the law of England and Wales, and the courts of England and Wales have exclusive jurisdiction. If any part of these terms is found unenforceable, the rest stand. Questions: nathanpelc@linkthink.co.uk.