Insights
Email is one of the most powerful marketing tools available to charities. But just how accessible are your emails?
Charities are becoming more mindful about ensuring social media and websites are accessible, but what about email? With 3.7 billion people in the world using email, it’s crucial that your emails are as accessible as possible.
Email is such a powerful communications, marketing, and advocacy tool. Compared to social media, email is far more effective at engaging people. According to Campaign Monitor, for example, average email open rates are 25% while only 6% of Facebook users see a post on their timeline.
Think about it. When someone signs up to receive emails, they are saying that they actively want to hear from you. It takes more effort for someone to sign up to an email newsletter than to click ‘follow’ on one of your social media channels. When someone trusts you with their email address, it’s important your emails work hard to keep people opening and reading them.
And with around 16 million people in the UK with a disability - including around 6.3 million with dyslexia and around 340,000 who are blind or partially sighted – it’s crucial that your emails are accessible to everyone who signs up to receive them.
According to email marketing specialist Alex Fearon, a consultant at Maybe Later, many people get caught up in email design and what their email looks like visually. Alex says: “While you can add alt-text to images, screen readers often find other design elements completely undetectable, so you’ve got to make sure your copy alone creates a great email experience.”
Here are some tips to help write accessible emails.
One of the easiest ways to make your emails accessible is to use simple language that is clear and concise. Replace long sentences with shorter ones (ideally 20 words or less), use paragraphs to break up copy, replace difficult words with simpler ones, and avoid jargon and acronyms.
The first thing a screen reader will read is the subject line of an email, so make sure it’s clear and relevant. Try to ensure that your subject line is ten words or less and that it explains succinctly what the email is about so that the reader can decide if they want to read it or not. Avoid cryptic subject lines.
Also, whilst it can be tempting to use emoji in an email subject line to help it stand out in someone’s inbox, it’s not good for accessibility.
Having headings, paragraphs, and bulleted lists is good practice for web copy. The same goes for email. Having headings means that people can easily scan, both visually and using assistive technology, to what is most relevant to them.
Alex says that charities shouldn’t “be afraid to play with whitespace”. Whitespace is also known as ‘negative space’. It creates space between elements, such as padding around an image or space between paragraphs. It helps create breathing space for the reader and ensures your email isn’t cluttered.
It can be tempting to use all caps to indicate urgency or to grab attention, or italics or fancy fonts to make a sentence stand out. But doing so is not accessible.
All caps are more difficult to read, for everyone. But it’s particularly frustrating for people using screen readers, as the technology will read out each capital letter rather than the word as a whole.
If your email contains information about a campaign or event that has a hashtag, ensure you use Camel Case to make it easier to read, capitalising the first letter of each word – for example #BreastCancerAwarenessMonth.
When adding a link to an email to read a case study on your website or to sign up for a fundraising challenge, make sure it’s as descriptive as possible.
For example, ‘read Sarah’s experience of living on the streets’ tells people if they click on the link, they will be taken to your website to read a story.
If you’re using an image, or images, in your email it is important that you add alt-text for screen readers and other assistive technology, such as text-to-speech software. Alt-text describes the image, in a visual way, for people who are blind or partially sighted. If you’re struggling to describe the image yourself, use ChatGPT to help. Just be sure to read through the copy, edit it if needed, and be mindful of any biases.
A top tip from Alex is to preview your email in dark mode. “Due to things like sensitivity and eye strain, some people have dark mode permanently turned on. Often when organisations use brand coloured text, which shows up perfectly on a white background, as standard the email copy becomes virtually illegible in dark mode.”
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