The three email marketing basics most Shopify stores miss are a multi email welcome sequence, formatting that renders cleanly across inboxes, and intentional preview text. Fix the welcome sequence first: automated flows convert far better than one off campaigns at every revenue stage.
Automated emails are roughly 2% of what Shopify brands send, yet they drive close to 37% of all email revenue. The basics are not boring. They are where the money hides.
The value of email marketing is increasing all the time. It’s an owned channel, meaning that no other platform can control it, which is ideal for ecommerce companies that are reliant on mega platforms like Amazon and Spotify.
Email isn’t just about sending out discounts. It’s also a high-converting sales asset that makes customers more loyal and helps them get to know your brand better.
In this guide, we look at some email marketing basics that most ecommerce entrepreneurs miss.
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Your welcome sequence should be multiple emails
Entrepreneurs often miss the concept that their welcome sequence should be a series of emails instead of just one email. Sequences tend to work better because they allow you to introduce your brand to customers more fully and in stages.
Format your emails properly
You also want to make sure that you’re formatting your emails properly. Many entrepreneurs miss this and think that email formats are pretty much standard or similar to what they’re used to using elsewhere. That’s not always the case. For example, it’s helpful to use tools that resize תמונות בדוא"ל automatically. These can sometimes exceed margins and look clumsy. It’s also a good idea for correctly format columns or avoid using them at all for simplicity.
Neglecting preview text
Some Shopify entrepreneurs also make the mistake of neglecting preview text. E-commerce shop owners will spend enormous amounts of time worrying about email headlines without thinking about the snippet of text that appears below the subject line. When they do this, most major email clients like Gmail and Apple Mail will just pull in random texts from the email, hoping for the best.
To fix this, all you need to do is provide a punchy subject line as the hook and then the preview text as the payoff. The subject line is “Your cart is waiting.” The preview text could say something like, “We saved your items, but they won’t last long.”
So there you have it, some of the ways you can avoid missing out on easy wins when it comes to your e-commerce email marketing.
A Shopify welcome sequence should be four emails, not one, delivered across the first one to two weeks after signup. The first delivers the promised incentive and a short introduction, the second shares your brand story, the third adds social proof and a second small offer, and the fourth provides product education or reminds the subscriber that the welcome offer is expiring. A single welcome email wastes the warmest moment you will ever have with a subscriber. Spreading the introduction across a short series lets you build goodwill in stages and convert while purchase intent is still high, and even Shopify Email supports a basic automated version at no extra cost.
Email campaigns are one off sends you schedule manually, while automated flows trigger automatically based on a subscriber’s behavior, such as joining your list or abandoning a cart. The distinction matters because automated flows consistently outperform campaigns by a wide margin. Across the ecommerce data set, automated emails make up only about 2% of total volume yet drive close to 37% of all email revenue. Campaigns still have a role for promotions and announcements, but flows are where the compounding, hands off revenue lives. If you have time to build only one thing this month, build a flow before you plan your next campaign.
Your Shopify emails are likely displaying images incorrectly because the images are exported at full resolution and exceed the email template’s width, which causes clipping, slow loading, and broken layouts on mobile. Around half of all opens happen on a phone, so an image that looks fine in your desktop editor can arrive cramped or unloaded. Resize images to fit the template width before uploading, ideally with a tool that resizes email photos automatically, and avoid multi column layouts that collapse awkwardly on small screens. A single column design renders reliably across Gmail, Apple Mail, and Outlook. Always send yourself a test to a phone before a campaign goes out.
Put a line of copy in your preview text that extends your subject line rather than repeating it, treating the subject as the hook and the preview as the payoff. For example, a subject line of “Your cart is waiting” pairs well with preview text like “We saved your items, but they will not last long.” If you leave the field blank, Gmail and Apple Mail pull in whatever text sits at the top of your email, often header code or an unsubscribe link, which weakens your open rate. Every major email tool, including Shopify Email, Omnisend, and Klaviyo, has a dedicated preview text field. Filling it in takes ten seconds and should be a non negotiable step on every send.
Shopify Email is enough when you are under roughly $50K per month and just need a welcome sequence, clean formatting, and good preview text, while Klaviyo earns its higher cost once you are scaling past six figure months and need advanced segmentation. The honest answer is stage dependent. Buying Klaviyo at $10K months usually means paying for power you will not use and complexity that slows you down, which is the premature optimization that stalls early stores. Start with the built in tools or a free Omnisend plan, prove the basics work, then upgrade when your data volume and revenue justify the investment. The right tool is the one that matches where your store is today.