| This is great to see and long overdue. We get a lot of customers that ask about how they should create email templates. We don't really want to go down that path, so we'll be happy to direct them here. Also, +1 on using Litmus for testing rendering across different clients. There are also other things to consider when designing email templates and email deliverability in general. - Always use multi-part, with a nice text part. Not having a text part is a spam flag. - Keep the ratios of images and links to text low. High ratios are spam flags. Also, most of the time images will not be displayed by default. - Use common sense, avoiding exclamations and referencing spammy words (eg. buy now!). - Avoid link shorteners (commonly used in phishing emails) - Use Litmus to test against spam filters to see where common sense fails. - mail-tester.com is another nice free tool for checking for spam flags. - There are also some little things that can trip you up, like having malformed message-Ids where the domain in the message-ID does not match the sending domain. For more thoughts, we have a best practices (http://documentation.mailgun.com/best_practices.html) Edit: Also, PLEASE only send emails to people that have given you (like on your website) permission and you have validated the email address with a confirmation link (double opt-in) before sending subsequent emails. Always give recipients the conspicuous and easy ability to unsubscribe. |
With the notable exception of iOS Mail.app and OS X Mail, virtually all email clients block images by default.