First Email Marketing Tip of 2007

January 9, 2007

Ensure your emails are created by a designer who knows their stuff!

I have spent the better part of my day trying to fix numerous validation errors within a few emails that I assumed I had the experience to design. The HTML files came to me, already created but very basic and I took it upon myself to “improve and redesign”. I have a little HTML experience and a little Dreamweaver experience. I very wrongly assumed that this little amount of experience was all I needed to create and design a batch of brand new emails (which by the way I had planned to send out tomorrow morning). After transferring the code to a markup validation service I found out how wrong this assumption was. I had a huge numer of errors in all three of my emails. (FYI – I HIGHLY recommend doing this to each and every email before sending to ensure that your HTML format is W3C compliant. The service I use is the W3C Markup Validator and is free of charge.) I have spent the morning and afternoon fixing my numerous errors and have now learned my lesson!

Learn from my mistake…Let a professional do it!

Entry Filed under: Email Marketing Tips, W3C Standards, W3C markup Validation Service, ecommerce, email marketing, emarketing, markup validation, web design. .

2 Comments Add your own

  • 1. dogonablog  |  January 10, 2007 at 11:00 pm

    I thought that Dreamweaver took care of da code for you? I’m wrong? What exactly does dreamweaver do? My little paws are clammering to know!

  • 2. diy naturally  |  January 18, 2007 at 2:14 am

    Great post and I just wanted to add one point about invalid HTML code in respect to email. If your code is invalid you recipient’s email client may tag your email as spam.

    This is very different in the web page design world. If your code is invalid it could still render properly in a browser and your viewer can still see the web page. But being marked as a spammer is not good with email marketing and more than likely that email will not be seen or read.

    So extra caution needs to be taken when validating email HTML code.

    :D diy naturally

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