We’ve all received those emails. The ones with subject lines screaming in ALL CAPS about INCREDIBLE OFFERS and LIMITED TIME DEALS that you absolutely MUST ACT ON NOW. They feel desperate, impersonal, and frankly, insulting to your intelligence.
Let’s make sure your marketing emails never join that trash pile.
The Problem With Most Marketing Emails
Most businesses write emails thinking about what they want to say rather than what their audience wants to hear. This fundamental disconnect is why so many emails feel spammy even when the sender has good intentions.
Your subscribers gave you their email address for a reason—they expected something valuable in return. Every email that doesn’t deliver value erodes that trust. Send enough worthless emails, and you’ve trained your audience to ignore you.
Write Like You’re Emailing One Person
The easiest fix is to stop writing to “subscribers” and start writing to a specific person. Imagine your ideal customer. Give them a name. Picture them opening your email on their phone during lunch.
Now write directly to them.
Instead of “Our customers often struggle with…” try “You’ve probably noticed that…” Instead of “We’re excited to announce…” try “I think you’ll really like this…”
This shift from third person to second person, from corporate to conversational, transforms how your emails feel. They become letters from a person, not broadcasts from a company.
Lead With Value, Not Asks
Spammy emails typically open with what the sender wants—buy this, sign up for that, don’t miss this offer. Valuable emails open with something useful for the reader.
Start with a tip, an insight, a story, or an observation that your reader will genuinely find helpful. Earn their attention before asking for anything.
Even in promotional emails, lead with the benefit to them. “Save 3 hours weekly on email management” lands better than “Check out our new software.” Focus on the transformation you enable, not the product you’re selling.
Make Your Emails Scannable
Nobody reads marketing emails word-by-word on first pass. People scan, looking for something that catches their interest. Make scanning easy.
Use short paragraphs. One to three sentences max. Break up walls of text with whitespace. Bold key phrases that communicate your main points even if someone only reads those.
If someone can scan your email in 5 seconds and understand the core message, you’ve done your job well.
The Subject Line Sets Everything Up
Your subject line makes a promise. Your email body must deliver on that promise. Clickbait subject lines might get opens initially, but they destroy trust when the content doesn’t match.
If your subject says “The mistake that’s costing you clients,” your email better explain that mistake clearly and helpfully. If it pivots to a sales pitch without delivering useful content, readers feel tricked.
Aim for subject lines that are intriguing but honest. Build anticipation without manipulation.
Have a Single Clear Purpose
Spammy emails try to accomplish everything at once—promoting three products, announcing two features, and asking for feedback, all in one message. The result is confusing and overwhelming.
Each email should have one primary purpose. What’s the one thing you want the reader to do or understand after reading? Build your entire email around that single focus.
If you have multiple things to communicate, send multiple emails over time. Your subscribers will thank you.
Respect Their Time
Before sending any email, ask yourself: “Is this worth interrupting someone’s day for?”
If your email contains nothing new, nothing valuable, nothing interesting—don’t send it. Consistency matters, but not at the expense of quality. One excellent weekly email beats five mediocre daily emails.
When you do email, get to the point. Long introductions and unnecessary throat-clearing waste your readers’ time. Start with the good stuff.
Test and Refine
Pay attention to your metrics. Which emails get opened? Which get clicked? Which generate replies? Which get unsubscribes?
Over time, patterns emerge. Maybe your audience loves practical tips but ignores company news. Maybe they respond to stories but tune out statistics. Let their behavior guide your writing.
The best email marketers constantly test, learn, and improve. Your first attempt won’t be perfect, and that’s okay. The goal is gradual improvement over time.
The Golden Rule
Would you want to receive the email you’re about to send? Read it as if you’re the subscriber. Does it feel valuable? Respectful? Human?
If you wouldn’t want it in your inbox, don’t put it in theirs. Simple rule, but it eliminates most spam-like tendencies if you follow it honestly.
Email marketing doesn’t have to feel gross. When you genuinely care about helping your audience and communicate like a real person, your emails become something people actually look forward to receiving.
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