you NEED to know + learn how email design can impact inbox placement. All in this week's edition of Re:markable

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In this edition:

→ Find out email marketing updates you NEED to know 

→ Your guide to starting a B2B or B2C email newsletter 

→ Latest real email video verdicts 

→ Learn how email design can impact inbox placement (scroll)

→ Why emails can land in the inbox then move to spam (scroll)

you do you ever just want to quit marketing and buy a one-way ticket to Bali (totally the first place I thought of) and live off the land?

 

That's how I felt last week: 

    I've officially lost it...this is Michael Scott screaming lol

    Last week:

    • I messed up my newsletter big time last week 
    • I had a marketer who got BLACKLISTED and needed urgent help (at 10pm at night and I didn't log off till 2am)
    • A HubSpot project I scoped out and agreed with a client, then went totally backwards
    • 10 posts flopped on LinkedIn
    • 1 post about Neil Patel's email got people fighting about gated content 
    • I realised one of my forms was broken
    • My masterclasses link to buy went DOWN 

    It was a week. A heavy week (hope yours was better)

     

    And then on top of all of that, I needed to get all the BIG email updates written out and analysed (there's a lot)

     

    #LiveLaughLove right? 

    Recent Email Updates 

    you NEEDS to know 

    In total, 15 big updates have been announced this year (probably more tbh)

     

    I've written everything you need to know, including:

    • Explanations of all the new updates
    • Why have they done it
    • What it means for email user
    • What it means for YOU
    READ: The Big Email Marketing Updates of 2025 →

    From the Vault

    A blog a day keeps the spam filter away 

    ⌚ 10 min read:

    → Your Guide to Starting an Email Newsletter Your Audience Needs (B2B & B2C)

    ⌚ 7 min read:

    → CRM Cleanup Guide: 5 Steps to Clean Up Your CRM (Without Crying)

    ⌚ 6 min read:

    → How to Clean Your Email List (Properly)

    From the Queen’s Court

    Voiceover video verdicts 

    How to not do a restaurant review

    See Gaucho's attempt at following up, I loved it but it could be better
    Hear the verdict

    B2B newsletter copy overload

    Take a look at this B2B newsletter, is it too much?
    Hear the verdict

    The Inbox Drop

    How email design can impact inbox placement

    Inbox placement: Where your email ends up in someone's inbox e.g. the spam folder, promotions or other folders 

     

    FYI: Inbox placement is not static; it will change email by email, day by day, audience by audience. 

     

    What most people think: design only matters after someone opens your email.

     

    But actually, it could decide if your email gets seen at all. 

     

    Inbox providers don’t just check your SPF, DKIM, and sender reputation. They also scan how your email is built:

    • The structure
    • The balance
    • The formatting

    Messy design can tip your campaign from inbox to spam.

     

    Multiple studies (Litmus, Clearout, Folderly, Enchant) confirm that spam filters and inbox algorithms use formatting signals as quality checks. Not the only factor, but a key one.

      Practical design rules for inbox placement

      Balance images & text

      Do not use image-only emails. Aim for ~35–60% images, 40–65% text. Always write alt text that reads like real copy too. 

      Lighter = better 

      Huge templates and images will load slowly and break more. Aim for under 100KB file weight where you can.

      Design for dark mode

      Invisible logos and washed out CTAs kill clicks (and future inbox trust). Test your design on dark mode before sending.

      Accessibility is performance

      Readable fonts, proper contrast, tappable buttons = better engagement. And engagement is a deliverability signal.

      Link discipline

      One main CTA. No “link soup” where every pixel goes somewhere. Fewer links = clearer intent = fewer spam flags.

      Keep your HTML clean

      No broken tags, no weird nesting, no “copied from Word” (it screws with your code, paste from notepad). Messy code looks spammy to the filters. 

      Try the nightclub test

      Think of inbox placement like getting past a bouncer at a nightclub:

      • Inbox → you look trustworthy and human (clean, structured, text-forward)
      • Promotions (or other) tab → polished, branded, a bit sales-y. Legit, but you’ll wait in line
      • Spam → messy, image-only, link-stuffed, too many large images

       

      Inbox placement and deliverability is a big picture game

      It’s built on your history, reputation, how you acquire your data, engagement (this is a big one), and all the tech signals (SPF/DKIM/DMARC etc).

       

      BUT...a single email design can be the reason one send lands in spam while others don’t

       

      Why?

       

      Spam filters use machine learning

      If your design looks or feels like spam that email can get flagged even if your reputation is great.

       

      Bad design also hurts engagement

      If an email doesn’t load, feels clunky, or hides text in images and images are the CTA's, people won’t interact → low engagement → weaker future placement.

       

      So no, design alone won’t define your deliverability. But it can absolutely tip the balance for an individual email send. 

      Did you know? 

      Emails can land in the inbox and then move to spam on their own 

       

      This usually happens on big sends (relative to your list size).

       

      Email platforms throttle delivery in batches. If early batches get poor signals (deletes, spam reports, no engagement), inbox providers may reclassify later batches… and even push earlier ones from inbox → spam.

       

      That’s why I use priming:

      • Send to your most engaged subscribers first
      • Then drip the rest in smaller waves
      • Always ask: “Who actually needs this?”

      Big spikes without priming = big risk to deliverability

      Plug of the Week 

      She's fully booked 💅

      Well, sort of (if you ever need urgent email help, just email me!)

       

      I'm opening up my calendar now (2026) for email audits, projects, training and consultancy.

       

      If you're thinking about getting external support or you want to find out how I can become part of your team, let's chat before the year is over. 

      Start a conversation →
      Beth headshot final

      Catch you before the spam filters do.

       

      Speak soon,


      Beth x

      I have ADHD (IFYKYK) so please excuse any typos and spelling errors in this email.

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