Forum Moderators: phranque

Message Too Old, No Replies

HTML Newsletters

How will Outlook 2003 affect yours?

         

Visit Thailand

6:43 am on Oct 25, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



According to CNET in a review of the new Outlook 2003
Outlook no longer automatically downloads images from Web servers

While I am pleased about this, how will this hamper people that send out html based newsletters?

Are you going to change format?

Mardi_Gras

3:12 pm on Oct 25, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



The implementation is interesting. Outlook Express gives the option to "read in plain text." In that case, OE reads the plain text portion of a multi-part e-mail. In OL 11, the html shows up but nothing can be downloaded from the server without user action (as you said).

It will definitely screw up anyone tracking opens. As far as the images, if your mail looks interesting enough, you can only hope that the user will download the images.

My plan is to keep the most essential image information as small as possible but include it with the mail (title bar images, for example); anything not absolutely essential to viewing the mail properly (or establishing credibility) will continue to be hosted.

You can still get a pretty good feel for the content of the mail even without images being downloaded. But it will be interesting to see how this impacts effectiveness. Subject and key text will become even more important.

<<added>>I think you will want to stay away from any images that take up a lot space (design-wise) - the less space is missing because of images not being downloaded, the more true your layout will be to your original intent. I hope that makes sense :) <</added>>