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Im having to create an HTML newsletter for one of our clients. I have tested and found that it works ok. However i have 2 questions:
1) is it possible to send images within the newsletter? I tried this but the images didn't send. I guess this is because the source code cannot find the image once it is opened on someone elses machine. Is there another way?
2) I beleive that it depends on the settings of persons email facility as to whether they can receive HTML. am i right?
hope you can help
Yep! And btw I don't like to be logged every time I read the mail.
This point could be interesting for your client but it's definitively a reason for me not to subscribe several newsletters!
Obviously much of it is down to the audience, sitepoint's audience are probably quite techy and likely to have an always on connection that should be quite fast.
If it were me I wouldn't say to my client that html emails are evil, I'd consider the factors such as target audience, how you got the list, what the newsletter's purpose is and weight my response accordingly. Can people signing up to the newsletter have any choice in the matter?
Obviously this bumps up the size of the e-mail and a 28.8k modem user probably wouldn't like you very much for it but a guy with DSL probably wouldn't care less...
Here's some good articles on HTML mail:
HTML eMail Troubleshooter [webmasterbase.com]
All about HTML Email [hotwired.lycos.com]
Josh
>>...at some point you have to tell them why they want what you have
Surely exactly the same goes for website itself, but that doesn't stop you using HTML.
You'll find gazillions of articles out there advocating HTML email and their 'increased clickthrough rates'.
"The clickthrough rates are noticeably higher on HTML email. Analytics show that customers are less likely to unsubscribe from HTML email than their text counterparts." from [pageresource.com...]"Most importantly, we have found that well designed HTML delivers higher clickthrough rates than text. On a recent client campaign we received clickthrough rates of 9.8% on the HTML and 3% on the text format of an email with otherwise identical copy and offer." from [thedmco.com...]Admittedly there are many people out there who you'll find that prefer plain text (most notably lacking any kind of statistic though). If I sign up to a newsletter I always ask for HTML. The reams and reams of horrible untidy ASCII with enormous URLS stretching on for ever make me ill.
It's not a simple argument and there isn't a simple answer.