Yes.
The prerequisite for finding someone to sign on your behalf is that you must inform the relevant parties of the contract in advance and supplement the authorization letter for signing.
The trustee does not need to be present, but the principal must be present. The entrustment itself is a unilateral legal act. If you want to handle the notarization of the entrustment, you need to provide your ID card, household register, materials related to non-entrusted matters, and the trustee's ID card (copies are also acceptable, because generally the trustee and the trustee are not present Entrusted notarization is commonly used in certain regions). The power of attorney should generally clearly state the personal information of the client and trustee (name, gender, date of birth, current address, ID number, contact number, etc.), the reason for the trust, the matters to be entrusted, the period of the trust, whether there is the right to sub-trust, etc. .
(Preferably more)