You should start by reading the manpage of every shell on your system.
There are different flavours of shells. Each flavours uses slightly different (per session and per shell, per site and per user) initialisation files. For example:
sh (and bash) use /etc/profile and ~/.profile
bash also uses ~/.bash_profile, ~/.bashrc, ~/.bash_logout
csh uses /etc/.login and ~/.cshrc
etc...
The above list is not meant to be exhaustive. It is to illustrate you will need to check the exact behaviour of each shell that is used on your system and configure it appropriately.
You also need to consider whether you want to change system-wide behaviour (corresponding to initialisation files under /etc) or user-specific behaviour (corresponding to initialisation files in the user's home directory).
For certain shells, there's also per-session (i.e. once per login) and per-shell settings (e.g. for every terminal window). A good example is ~/.bash_login (executed once per login) and ~/.bashrc (executed for every shell - e.g. terminal window).
zshedit/etc/zsh/zprofileor/etc/zsh/zshrc