To make an email stand out, use a subject line under three words and remove the preheader text. This creates visual white space around your message, distinguishing it from the 98% of emails that use preheaders. This visual disruption can skyrocket open rates.

Related Insights

A rarely used but effective tactic is placing the same emoji at the beginning and end of the email preheader (the second subject line). This visual framing technique draws attention in a crowded inbox and can improve open rates for both B2B and B2C campaigns.

Prospects often hesitate to open emails, fearing a lengthy commitment. By adding an estimated read time (e.g., '3-minute read') to your pre-header, you manage expectations, remove friction, and make it easier for them to engage, which boosts open rates.

A counterintuitive email marketing test is to have no preheader text. This creates visual whitespace in the recipient's inbox, making the email stand out from the clutter and potentially boosting open rates by up to 15%. A simple code snippet, which can be sourced from ChatGPT, is needed to prevent clients from auto-filling the space.

While many marketers use brackets at the beginning of email subject lines, new data from subjectline.com shows placing them at the end is boosting open rates. This tactic works by drawing the reader's eye to a key callout, and contrary to myth, it does not negatively impact deliverability or land emails in spam.

The email preheader is crucial for engagement. Beginning this preview text with a 'continuation word' like 'and,' 'but,' or 'plus' creates a cognitive link to the subject line. This simple linguistic trick encourages the reader's eye to keep moving and significantly lifts open rates.

Sales director Florin Tertulia uses cheeky, playful subject lines like "Ronald's beef. Isn't with us" to create a "scroll stopper." This tactic is designed to break the pattern of standard corporate emails, sparking curiosity and standing out in a crowded C-level inbox.

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.

AI-generated subject lines often use title case. Writing your subject line in all lowercase makes it feel more human and less automated, helping it stand out. This tactic can counter the generic feel of AI content and, according to World Data Research, can lift open rates by around 14%.

A counterintuitive yet effective email tactic is capitalizing an entire word in the middle of a subject line, not at the start or end. This simple, cost-free A/B test is trending because it breaks visual patterns in the inbox, leading to a reported 16% open rate increase for B2B and 21% for B2C.

Explicitly telling recipients to 'Open this' or 'Open this email' in the subject line can lead to a significant lift in open rates. This direct command, while seemingly simple, taps into our subconscious tendency to follow instructions and stands out in a crowded inbox.

Short Subject Lines with No Preheader Create Inbox White Space, Boosting Open Rates | RiffOn