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How Should I Approach Image-only vs Image/text Balanced Emails?

  • 26 January 2021
  • 4 replies
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Badge +3

Hi all, we’ve just migrated into Klaviyo and are setting up our first emails to send. Klaviyo’s best practices are quite clear on not sending image-only emails but in having a balance of images - text & buttons for deliverability and accessibility. I get this, however, nearly every single marketing email I get from large brands are image-only. How are they getting away with that and can we?

What are your experiences with image-only emails?

Thanks for your feedback!

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Best answer by retention 26 January 2021, 20:23

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4 replies

Userlevel 2
Badge +5

Thanks Taylor & Joseph, for providing valuable context to the perennial question of image heavy emails.

For me, I think the key takeaways are:

  1. If you're a small, or new merchant, with a low or no list reputation, start by strictly following 'best practice'. I particularly like/agree with Joseph's comments about text only emails
  2. If you're a larger, or more established merchant, with a strong list reputation, you can afford to be bolder when it comes to image heavy emails
  3. If you're somewhere in between, TEST and learn.
Userlevel 7
Badge +38

One thing that has surprisingly worked well are emails that are plain text only, written like an email you send to a friend (clutch your pearls, like savages!).  I’m not sure if it’s the deliverability algorithms, or just the “authenticity” feels, but I’m always surprised at how well it performs compared to emails that takes a whole design team, a fancy photo shoot, photo touch up artists, and the blessings from legal, the brand police, and which side of the bed the CMO woke up on to produce!

 

I just saw this and this advice is 💯 for smaller brands.  We use this often and it performs VERY well.  

Userlevel 7
Badge +57

I agree with @Taylor Clark , but just to add a bit more context from some experience we have had working with small and large merchants. 

Inbox providers (like Gmail, Yahoo, Outlook) all have different algorithms to determine whether your email lands in their primary inbox, a filtered folder (promotions tab or other filters), or the Spam folder - aka deliverability.  

These algorithms have factors specific to the email you send, the history of all emails you send, and the history of that specific user, and the aggregate of users who receive that same email and past emails. It wouldn’t be too far fetched to think that they can even use external factors - like how long people spend reading the email, if they clicked on the link how long did they come back to their inbox, and if you are really cynical, Google especially, probably even knows things you do beyond the email! (Searches after reading email? Website powered by Google Analytics? Purchase receipt email after a click? Are you using an Android Phone?)  Ok, that got dark pretty quick…  

Long story short, larger brands and merchants can get away with a lot because of the history and “reputation” that they have earned (or destroyed) over a larger volume of emails and possibly time.  As a younger brand, or a lower volume merchant, I try to advocate for Klaviyo’s deliverability best practice even though it may contradict to what the “big brands” are doing.  

On a completely side note, I always remind people to use their brand’s “smallness” to their advantage and try more things.  Big brands are stuck in their highly styled, polished and sometimes repetitive templates - you have the freedom to experiment without a committee of approvals. 

One thing that has surprisingly worked well are emails that are plain text only, written like an email you send to a friend (clutch your pearls, like savages!).  I’m not sure if it’s the deliverability algorithms, or just the “authenticity” feels, but I’m always surprised at how well it performs compared to emails that takes a whole design team, a fancy photo shoot, photo touch up artists, and the blessings from legal, the brand police, and which side of the bed the CMO woke up on to produce!

Userlevel 5
Badge +13

Hi @chrish

This is a great question and one that we get asked a lot. The reason we generally recommend that people don’t use image only emails is that it can cause issues with deliverability. Different ISPs’ (gmail/yahoo/etc) algorithms may think that a single image is more likely to be spam than a text heavy email, and that sort of makes sense. 

However, this is not always the case, and as you mentioned, many brands have determined that this in fact does not hurt their deliverability. Many things impact deliverability, email content only being a piece of it. 

So the short answer is that you should feel free to test this. You will not be permanently hurt in any way by testing an image only email. If it performs well, keep it going. If it performs poorly, try a different angle. If it performs average, mix in image only emails along with text/image emails. 

Hopefully this helps!

 

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