Personalizing subject lines with a recipient's industry or interests is a known tactic that provides a solid 20% lift in open rates. However, this should be considered a baseline, as more advanced psychological tactics like aspirational messaging can yield even higher returns of 24-28%.

Related Insights

Frame email subject lines to appeal to the higher-level position your audience desires. A manager wants to know what a CMO is doing. This psychological tactic, which plays on ambition, can lift open rates by 24-28% over standard personalization by speaking to who your audience wants to become.

For B2B re-engagement, a highly effective subject line is "Are you still with [Company Name]?". This personalizes the email at scale by dynamically inserting the contact's employer. It grabs attention and prompts an open to confirm or update their status, successfully re-engaging them with your content or offers.

From Nov 20th to Dec 20th, sending a personal letter-style email from a founder or executive to unengaged contacts can increase open rates by 40%. The key is changing the "from name" to a person, not the brand, and using a subject line that acknowledges their absence. This strategy works for both B2B and B2C brands.

Combine two specific audience identifiers in your subject line, like role and company attribute ("Mid-market CMOs") or interest and a pain point ("Beauty fans with sensitive skin"). This "double personalization" tactic reportedly increases B2B open rates by 24% and B2C by 29% by making the message feel hyper-relevant.

Data from Subjectline.com reveals a powerful, simple tactic for email marketing. Using a "continuation pre-header" that begins with "and," "but," or "plus" creates a narrative link to the subject line, sparking curiosity and significantly boosting open rates. This is an easy-to-implement test for any campaign.