But if no one’s opening, clicking, or converting… it doesn’t mean much.
Below, I'm going to share: 👇
-The metrics that matter
-What different engagement levels tell you
-How to measure engagement (the right way)
-Practical tips to boost engagement
Your email analytics show dozens of metrics, but not all of them reflect how engaged your audience really is. Focus on these five to truly understand your engagement:
-Open rate: The % of recipients who opened your email. It’s your first indicator of whether your subject line did its job.
-Click-through rate (CTR): The % of people who clicked on something inside your email. This tells you how well your content and CTAs are performing.
-Conversion rate: The % of people who took action after clicking, like making a purchase or filling a form. Whatever you wanted them to do.
-Bounce rate: The % of emails that didn’t even make it into inboxes. High bounce? Time to clean your list.
-Unsubscribe rate: A few unsubscribes are normal. But if lots of people are peacing out, your emails may be irrelevant, too frequent, or just plain annoying.
Not everyone on your list is equally excited about your brand. Knowing where people stand helps you tailor your approach – so you can meet them where they are.
Let’s break down the four typical levels of engagement:
🔥 Highly engaged: They open almost everything, click often, and regularly convert. Focus on rewarding loyalty (e.g. VIP access, exclusive offers, early sneak peeks).
😌 Moderately engaged: They engage now and then but aren’t your biggest fans (yet). Test content formats, cadence, and timing to win them over.
😴 Low engagement: They rarely interact. Use personalization and strong subject lines to recapture their attention – or move them to a re-engagement flow.
💤 Inactive: Haven’t opened or clicked in 6+ months. Time to send a “Still want to hear from us?” email or consider a list clean-up.
Listen: you don’t need fancy dashboards to understand your engagement.
Start with these simple steps:
1. Use the right platform (Like @omnisend)
2. Set goals for every campaign
Before you hit send, ask: What do I want this email to achieve?
Here’s a quick cheat sheet to bookmark:
Having a clear goal helps you know which metrics to prioritize (and what “success” looks like).
3. Segment and compare
Averages only tell part of the story. If you really want to understand engagement, break down your audience into segments, like:
This helps you see which groups are clicking, converting, or ghosting your emails. Use that to tailor content or timing to each segment.
4. Watch trends, not just one-offs
Always measure engagement metrics over time, not just per email.
One low-performing email doesn’t mean your strategy’s broken. But if engagement is dipping consistently, that’s a sign something needs adjusting.
Once you’ve got a handle on your metrics, it’s time to make them better.
Here’s how to do that:
1. Personalize beyond subscriber names
Adding someone’s first name is a nice start, but real personalization goes deeper.
Use customer data to tailor:
-Product recommendations
-Subject lines and send times
-Content based on browsing or purchase history
-Location-specific offers or events
The more relevant the email feels, the more likely it is to get opened and clicked. Here’s an example from Uniqlo: product recs tailored to your local weather.
Pro Tip: Create dynamic content blocks in your emails based on behavior or tags.
2. Segment your list
Not every subscriber wants the same thing. Segment your audience by behavior, purchase history, engagement level, or customer lifecycle stage.
Some ideas:
-New subscribers → Send an intro series
-Frequent buyers → Highlight loyalty perks or VIP drops
-Inactive users → Trigger a re-engagement flow
When emails feel tailor-made, people respond.
3. Run A/B tests on your emails
Experiment with your content and design to find out what works for your subscribers.
Testing works best when it’s focused. Instead of changing five things at once, test one variable at a time, like:
-Subject line
-CTA button
-Image placement
-Email length
Remember to check the relevant metrics to understand engagement properly. Testing subject lines? Check the open rate. Testing CTAs? Pay attention to the clicks.
4. Make your emails mobile-first
Over 60% of emails are opened on a phone. If yours aren’t mobile-friendly, engagement tanks.
Keep things easy to read and tap:
-Use a single-column layout
-Make buttons large and clickable
-Keep paragraphs short and scannable
-Use alt text for all images
Pro Tip: Preview your emails on mobile and fix any layout or readability issues before sending.
5. Simplify your design and messaging
People don’t have a lot of time, so your email should do its job in under 10 seconds.
That means:
-A clear, eye-catching headline
-One main CTA (not five)
-Supporting visuals that don’t overwhelm
-White space to break up text
Clutter can confuse the reader, but simplicity converts.
6. Optimize your send times
Obviously, don’t send emails when your customers are snoozing. But even during the day, there’s no “perfect” time to send.
Use past campaigns to identify when your audience tends to open and click. Then test small time shifts to find the sweet spot.
Some tools also offer AI send time optimization to automatically send your emails at the best time based on behavior, patterns, and other factors.
7. Re-engage the sleepy subscribers
Some subscribers will always drift. But before you give up, try winning them back.
Send a “We miss you” email, offer a small incentive, or ask them what kind of content they want to receive. You might be surprised who comes back.
Graza takes a different approach by asking past customers if they want a “refill”:
Final Thoughts
Here’s what really matters when it comes to email engagement:
✅ Track the right stuff, like opens, clicks, conversions, bounces, and unsubscribes.
✅ Personalize + segment. Talk to the right people with the right message.
✅ Test often. Small tweaks (like subject lines or send times) can make a big impact.
✅ Design for humans. Keep it simple, clear, and easy to read on any screen.
Stick to these, and you’ll be well on your way to emails that actually get noticed (and acted on).
If you enjoyed this breakdown, please like, share, comment, and retweet!
@ecomchasedimond and I send a daily newsletter focused retention marketing, specifically in email and sms marketing for ecommerce
People want to know your product works for their problem.
Today, we unpack ARMRA’s melatonin-focused email that shares the science, myth busting, and leads with curiosity.
But does this infographic get readers excited enough to buy?
Let’s break it down👇
Let's start with the header block
🔍 TL;DR: The header nails curiosity and intrigue, but it could use a clearer benefit upfront and a sharper, more focused CTA that aligns with the email’s educational tone.
Here's what we liked and areas of improvement👇
What We Love
✔ Intriguing angle. Who doesn’t love seeing a myth debunked? ARMRA starts off strong, immediately making you curious to find out what you’ve misunderstood about melatonin. It’s smart, engaging, and makes you want to read more.
✔ Dreamy, on-brand visuals. ARMRA’s sleek product image set against a calming background instantly communicates sleep and relaxation – perfectly matching the melatonin topic and aligning with their brand identity.
✔ Catchy tagline. “The Undercover Talent of Melatonin” is clever. It hints there’s more to this common supplement than people realize, and urges users to keep scrolling.
Their Churro Latte email leans on FOMO, social proof, and crave-worthy copy to sell the return of a cult-favorite flavor.
But is the buzz enough to push people to click fast?
Let’s breakdown their email👇
Let's start with the header block
✔ Clear headline with urgency. “Churro Latte Is Back” + “And People Are Losing It” makes it obvious what’s happening and why it matters.
✔ Immediate CTA. The “Order Now” button is placed right under the headline for instant action.
✔ Social proof in the hero. Featuring a customer quote adds credibility and excitement right where attention is highest.
What We’d Do Differently
❌ The opening copy could lean harder on scarcity. Mentioning “sold out last time” up top would heighten urgency even more.
❌ The hero image is slightly blurred in the background. A sharper product focus could boost clarity and appetite appeal
❌ The “Order Now” button styling is a bit muted compared to the stronger green buttons later in the email. Consistent, bolder styling could make it pop.
In fact, it’s one of the few channels that consistently delivers ROI without draining your ad budget or your will to live
But here’s the deal: most inboxes are a hot mess. If you want your email to stand out, it’s got to look the part, and feel worth clicking
Here's 7 Email Trends we're seeing in 2025👇
First, what makes for good email design?
-A tidy header that gets out of the way. Logo? Great. One-liner above the fold? Even better. Anything else? Questionable. Don’t crowd the top with social icons and menu bars. We’re not building a website.
-Images with a purpose. Your visual should tell me something about the product or vibe, not just fill space. Stocky, generic images = instant snooze.
-Copy that pulls weight. Cute graphics mean nothing if your copy doesn’t close the loop. Speak clearly. Sound human. Give people a reason to care.
-CTAs that get noticed. A “Shop Now” button should look like it wants to be clicked. Don’t hide it in body text or bury it under a moodboard.
-A footer that finishes strong. Give us the legal stuff, yes. But also sneak in a little personality. Bonus points for Easter eggs, founder notes, or a cheeky gif.
1. Minimalism
Minimalist emails don’t mean boring beige layouts with Helvetica and vibes of despair. Good minimalism feels premium, helps the eye rest.
More importantly, it gives your one Big Idea the room it deserves.
Here’s what to keep in mind:
-One strong image
-One killer line of copy
-One action to take
-And a lot of whitespace doing silent design magic in the background
Avoid extra fluff or busy banners. It’s the difference between a messy flyer on a lamppost and a crisp billboard with your name on it.
A post purchase flow is designed to welcome, engage, and prepare your customer for their next purchase.
Today, we break down Olive and Piper's post purchase flow: A jewelry brand that provides a personal touch.
From heartfelt founder notes to seasonal styling inspiration and loyalty perks, the brand uses email to keep customers engaged well past the checkout.
Let's review their 9 emails 👇
1. Welcome to Olive & Piper 💍
Focus: Introducing the brand and setting the tone
Why This Works:
✅ Founder Tania’s story builds credibility and human connection
✅ Messaging ties jewelry to meaningful, everyday moments
✅ Welcome code incentivizes an immediate second purchase
What Needs Work:
❌ Customer UGC is missing; featuring styled looks could boost social proof
❌ The email doesn’t preview what’s next in the flow, which could build anticipation
2. You’re in the O&P Club
Focus: Loyalty program introduction
Why This Works:
✅ “Girl math” positioning makes rewards playful and approachable
✅ Clear outline of how to earn points removes friction
✅ Encourages engagement through social follows as well as purchases
What Needs Work:
❌ No immediate milestone; framing first-purchase perks would spark faster sign-ups
❌ Rewards examples feel generic — spotlighting “what 200 points gets you” would add urgency
One person, wearing all the hats, pulling off big results.
But once you hit a certain size or send volume, the cracks start to show: slow launches, missed tests, burned-out teammates.
That’s your sign it’s time to scale.
Here’s everything you need to know about that next step👇
Most brands start with one marketer doing it all. They write the emails, build the flows, pull the reports, and even fiddle with HTML when needed. It works… for a while.
But eventually, you’ll hit a wall, usually somewhere around 6–7 figures in revenue or a high email/SMS send volume.
Campaigns become more frequent. Segmentation gets trickier. Your list grows, and so does the pressure to keep it engaged.
That’s your cue to start building a specialized team.
Here’s a look at the core roles to prioritize as you grow:
1. Marketing Manager: Oversees the channel strategy, makes sure you’re hitting KPIs, manages budgets, and steers the ship across all marketing efforts.
2. Copywriter or Content Writer: Crafts messages that convert, while staying on-brand. A good copywriter understands the product and the customer, and knows how to write differently for email vs SMS vs push.
3. Designer: Creates scroll-stopping visuals that support your messaging and adapt to different devices. Bonus points if they know how to work within email builders or no-code tools.
4. Data Analyst: You need someone who can pull numbers, interpret trends, and answer questions like: what’s driving revenue? Who’s churning? What should we test next?
5. Specialized roles: As your team grows, consider bringing in roles like a CRM Developer, Automation Specialist, or Customer Journey Strategist to handle advanced logic, personalization, and lifecycle mapping.
💡 Pro tip: If hiring full-time feels like too much too soon, start with freelancers or agencies to fill these gaps until your volume justifies a full-time hire.