Deliverability

10 HTML tips for improving your email deliverability

In this post, we tell you 10 helpful HTMl tips that will help you fine-tune your email campaign. Follow these tips to enhance your email deliverability.

Gods in costumes in front of a building

PUBLISHED ON

PUBLISHED ON

Three years ago, a Mailjet team member experienced a surprising situation with one of the clients of his former employer.

The advertiser is a well-known player in the world of e-commerce. Every element of their email strategy is finely tuned. They have fantastic open rates (25%) in spite of an aggressive campaign (3 newsletters each week and 2-4 partner mailings each month). However, they experienced a serious deliverability problem. Yahoo! is the problem, which is surprising because Yahoo! constitutes a very female-orientated segment, which is also the target market of the e-commerce site in question.

For four months, every possible solution is tried. With each sending, a different element is tested…to no avail. And when we try to make direct contact with Yahoo!, no response.

The solution? To host the images of the emails…on the emails’ sender domain name! Finally, everything is back in order.

Unbelievable, isn’t it? And yet, this kind of situation happens all the time.

HTML: How does it influence the deliverability of your emails?

  • - Observe HTML standards – Just because it is recommended to code your emails like you would have 10 years ago doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t respect the standards.

  • - No javascript in your emails – First of all, because it serves no purpose, and secondly because it will incur the wrath of most anti-spam filters.

  • - Properly close your HTML tags and embed them correctly – Yes, this is related to the first point, but all too often we see this type of atrocity in emails: My Link

  • - No need to use tags predating HTML 4.01 – Actually, the use of has been discouraged…since 1999!

  • - Don’t use Iframes, plugins, … - Again, it doesn’t do anything, and it also gives anti-spam filters the impression that the content sent in the email was taken directly from a webpage.

  • - Host images on the domain name sending the emails - This is the case described above; the more coherent your identity is, the more anti-spam filters will trust you.

  • - Erase evidence of tools used to create your HTML - Especially in the case of MS Word or worse…Frontpage (not sure if anyone still uses it, but we can never be too careful).

  • - Do not leave the title tag empty - The ideal is to use the email subject.

  • - Use significant contrast between the text and background colors – A link in dark gray on a background of slightly less dark gray? Do you have something to hide?

This last tip will help you better understand the “spam score” that is displayed with your campaigns on Mailjet’s interface. In fact, this score is generated using SpamAssassin tests.

[ Posted Tue, 20 Aug 2013 13:31:00 ]

Popular posts

Hermes rides a firework next to a Goddess in front of a night sky with more fireworks

Top email marketing trends for 2022

To the outsiders, it can sometimes feel like email hasn't changed that much since it was created. Maybe this is why some are so persistent in...

Read more

Hermes on a moped delivering mail to a mailbox

Reducing email’s carbon footprint

When it comes to protecting our planet, every step toward cleaner practices – small and big – counts. So, what if we told you that emailing, as clean and green as it seems...

Read more

Mother's day gift for Hera

Marketing calendar 2024: Dates you shouldn’t miss this year

We finally got through 2023 (phew!) and Q1 is just around the corner. It’s time for you to start scribbling down your New Year’s Resolutions to make sure we start the year with a bang. If you’ve found your way here, we’re guessing that’s because creating a winning...

Read more

It's never been easier to build connected experiences. Start sending with Mailjet today.Get started on your path
CTA icon