Here is how email gets made in most organisations:
Someone writes the copy, then someone else (usually the same person) designs the email. The copy gets fitted into a template, the template gets approved by someone who looks at how it looks.
The copy gets checked by someone who reads what it says and at no point does anyone in the room ask whether the design and the copy are doing the same thing.
Sometimes they are; often they are not!
And the result is an email that feels slightly off, that does not quite connect. That performs below what it should for reasons nobody in the post-send review can quite name.
This blog is about why design and copy have to be built as a single system, not two parallel workstreams that get merged at the end and what that actually looks like in practice.
It draws from everything I have built around email copy psychology and email design psychology, and it brings them together into one framework. The two guides that go deeper on each side are linked throughout. This blog is the synthesis.
The typical email production workflow is design-first or template-first. You have a template or you are briefed to match a brand style and the copy is written to fit within it.
The number of words in the header, the length of the body copy, the number of sections — all of these are constrained by a design that was built before anyone knew what this specific email needed to say.
This is BACKWARDS - right?
Design should serve copy. The visual treatment of an email — every layout decision, every spacing choice, every typographic emphasis — exists to make the message easier to see, faster to understand, and more compelling to act on. When the design comes first, the copy is made to serve the template and the message suffers.
The alternative is not to ignore design or to produce plain-text emails by default. It is to make copy and design decisions together, from the same brief, with the same understanding of what the email is trying to do and who it is trying to do it for.
That shift, from sequential handoff to simultaneous thinking — is where the most significant email performance improvements come from.
Design and copy made separately and merged at the end will always underperform design and copy built together from the same brief. The brief is where the alignment happens, not the build.
The reason design and copy cannot be separated is that they are processed simultaneously by the same person in the same fraction of a second.
When someone opens your email, they do not read the copy first and then evaluate the design. They do not look at the design first and then read the words. Both things hit at once. The visual impression and the verbal message land together — and the brain assesses whether they are consistent, whether they confirm the same thing, whether they are telling the same story.
When they are consistent, the experience is seamless, the visual emphasis matches the verbal emphasis, the emotional tone of the design matches the emotional register of the copy, the hierarchy in the layout mirrors the hierarchy of information in the text, and the reader does not have to work - they just absorb.
When they are inconsistent, the experience creates friction. Even when the reader cannot articulate what is wrong, the brain notices the mismatch. Something feels off. The email is slightly harder to process than it should be. And in an environment where the threshold for giving up is extremely low, slightly harder is often enough.
Every email creates an experience at three levels simultaneously — and design and copy both contribute to all three.
Most of the design-copy misalignment I see in email audits shows up in five specific places. Get these right and almost everything else follows.
The subject line and preheader create a promise, the first thing the reader sees when the email opens must deliver on that promise — immediately.
This is what I call the bridge.
The pre-open package is copy, the email opening is design. If the design does not visually close the loop that the subject line opened, the reader registers a gap — even when they cannot name it. They opened expecting one thing. The visual environment says something different - friction, friction, friction.
In practical terms: the visual hook — the element the eye lands on first when the email opens, should confirm the promise of the subject line. Not repeat it word for word! Confirm it & close the loop. Tell the brain it was right to open.
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When they work against each other |
When they work together |
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Subject line: "Your Q3 results are in." First visual: a large hero image of the product with a tagline about features. |
Subject line: "Your Q3 results are in." First visual: the key result, large, clear, immediately visible. Design serves the copy promise. |
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Subject line: "The haircare secret we've been keeping." First visual: generic brand header with logo and navigation bar. |
Subject line: "The haircare secret we've been keeping." First visual: the product or ingredient, prominent, mysterious, matching the tone of the subject line. |
Hierarchy in copy is about what is most important, second most important, and so on. Hierarchy in design is about what is most visually prominent, second most prominent, and so on.
These two hierarchies must match!
If the most strategically important sentence in your email, the one sentence that most needs to land — is sitting in body text at the same visual weight as everything around it, design is working against copy. The reader's eye will not prioritise what the copy needs them to prioritise.
If a decorative header or an image is taking up the most visually prominent position in the email but is not carrying the most strategically important message, the design is using its most valuable real estate on the wrong thing.
The hierarchy test: look at your email and identify the most important message. Now look at the design and identify the most visually prominent element. Are they the same thing? If not, the hierarchies are misaligned.
Copy has an emotional register, warm or cool, urgent or relaxed, formal or conversational, playful or serious. Design has a visual tone, the same spectrum of emotions expressed through colour, spacing, typography weight, and layout density.
When they match, the email feels coherent. The reader's emotional response to the language and the emotional response to the visual environment are reinforcing each other.
When they do not match, the email creates cognitive dissonance. Warm, conversational copy about a human problem in a cold, heavy, product-catalogue-style layout. Urgent, time-sensitive copy in a spacious, leisurely design. Playful, irreverent language in a rigid, corporate visual treatment.
None of these mismatches are catastrophic individually. Together, they make the email feel slightly disconnected from itself. And that feeling reduces trust, which reduces engagement.
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When they work against each other |
When they work together |
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Copy tone: empathetic, personal, direct. "We know this has been a hard year for a lot of teams." Design: dense, formal, product-image-heavy, no white space. |
Copy tone: empathetic, personal. Design: spacious, clean, minimal visual noise, copy leading rather than images. Both feel warm. Both feel human. |
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Copy tone: urgent, commercial. "Three days left. Don't miss out." Design: leisurely, editorial, no visual emphasis on deadline. |
Copy tone: urgent. Design: prominent deadline, high-contrast CTA, visual weight on the time-sensitive element. Both create urgency. |
The call to action is where copy and design are most visually fused — they literally occupy the same space — and where misalignment is most expensive.
Copy's job in the CTA: tell the reader exactly what happens when they click, in a way that makes them want it to happen. Try a call to outcome or call to benefit - what is the transformation you're selling/offering?
Design's job in the CTA: make the button impossible to miss, immediately identifiable as clickable, and visually distinct from everything around it.
When both are right, the CTA is a moment of clearness. The reader knows what it says, knows what it does, can find it instantly, and it looks like something they can and should click.
When either is wrong, the CTA fails. A perfectly designed button that says "click here" fails on copy. A perfectly worded CTA that looks like a line of body text fails on design. A CTA that is visually buried below three other competing visual elements fails on hierarchy.
White space is a design decision, but it is also a copy decision!
When a sentence needs to land, when a line of copy is carrying significant emotional or strategic weight, the space around it determines how much weight it carries in the reader's experience. A powerful line surrounded by other content competes for attention.
The same line given breathing room on the page, visually isolated, lands differently.
This is the dimension of design that has the most direct relationship with copy and the least understood. Most design decisions are made for visual reasons. White space around a key sentence is a copy-driven design decision: this sentence is important enough to stand alone.
The discipline is in identifying which sentences deserve it — and that is a copy judgment, not a design judgment.
The single most impactful process change for most email teams is to start with a shared brief — one document that copy and design both work from before either of them starts.
The brief answers six questions:
Who is this for? Not "our newsletter subscribers." The specific segment, where they are in the journey, what they are thinking and feeling right now based on the TFDS framework.
What is the one most important thing this email needs to communicate? Not three things. One. If you cannot identify one most important thing, you are not ready to brief copy or design.
What is the one action we want the reader to take? One. What does success look like for this specific email?
What emotional register are we working in? What should the reader feel? Informed? Urgent? Reassured? Excited? Both copy and design need to answer to the same emotional brief.
What does the pre-open package promise? Subject line and preheader. The first visual and opening line need to deliver on this promise — copy and design both need to know what has been promised.
What does this email look like with no images? The images-off version is where copy and design alignment is tested most honestly. If the message survives without the images, the copy is doing its job. If the message disappears without the images, the design is carrying the content that copy should be carrying.
When both copy and design work from the same brief, the alignment is built in from the start rather than retrofitted at the end. The copywriter knows where the visual emphasis will be, so they do not bury the key message in a block of text that will be visually deprioritised. The designer knows what the most important message is, so they do not put the most visual weight on a decorative element that is not doing strategic work.
There is one test that reveals design-copy alignment failures faster than any other.
Turn off images. Or send yourself the email and look at it in an email client where images do not load by default.
What you see is the raw copy and structure — the bones of the email, without any visual amplification.
Ask three questions:
Can you understand what the email is about?
Can you find the call to action?
Does the message still make sense and feel coherent?
If yes to all three: your copy and design are genuinely aligned. The design was amplifying the message, not carrying it.
If no to any of them: the design was doing work that copy should have been doing. The message was dependent on visual elements rather than being expressed in words. And for every recipient who has images off by default — a significant proportion of B2B audiences — your email is not communicating.
This is not just a deliverability test. It is an alignment test. The email that still communicates without images is the email where copy and design are doing the same job in complementary ways.
Once you have the shared brief, copy and design influence each other throughout the build.
Copy informs design decisions: if the most important sentence in the email is a specific line of body text, the designer needs to know so they can give it visual weight, through spacing, through typographic treatment, through placement. If the emotional register of the copy is warm and direct, the design needs to reflect that, through spacing, through colour choices, through the absence of visual clutter that would make the email feel corporate.
Design informs copy decisions: if the email has a strong visual opening that creates a specific atmosphere, the opening line of copy needs to match that atmosphere rather than fight it. If the design has given significant visual real estate to a secondary element, the copy in that element needs to earn that space.
The back-and-forth between copy and design, where each iterates in response to the other, produces emails that feel coherent from the first glance to the call to action. That coherence is what the reader experiences as "this email gets me."
You do not need to be a designer to understand design, you do not need to be a copywriter to understand copy. You need to understand how the person reading your email is processing both, simultaneously, and build accordingly!