The Resurgence of Email Marketing – How to Run Impactful and Secure Campaigns in Light of COVID-19

In the past two months, we’ve seen commonplace business practices completely upended due to the global pandemic caused by COVID-19. Brands of all shapes and sizes are reevaluating what success looks like this year and amending their business goals accordingly. This has a huge impact on marketing as marketers scramble to engage with their customers in appropriate and thoughtful ways, often with smaller budgets than they had at the beginning of the year. 

One element of the marketing mix that has taken a front seat in light of COVID-19 is email marketing. Every consumer with an email address has received email updates from companies they’ve engaged with over the last 10 years – regardless of when their last touchpoint was. While marketers work to ensure every campaign shows clear results, an often overlooked element – during “normal” times, but even more so in times of upheaval – is security. As brands begin to rely on email marketing more frequently, they must prioritize security standards to protect both their consumers’ information and internal data from malicious parties. Below are some best practices to ensure a successful and secure email marketing campaign. 

Increase Deliverability

For email campaigns to be successful emails have to first and foremost make it to the consumers’ inbox. As of 2019, nearly one in five emails were caught in spam filters, never to be read by consumers.

This is a huge issue for marketers who are relying on email campaigns to reach their customers and elicit engagement. While there are various ways to improve deliverability, one integral step is implementing global authentication protocols. Core security measures – SPF, DKIM and DMARC – work together to authenticate senders’ email addresses. This ultimately instills confidence in consumers who can clearly recognize that the emails they’re receiving are credible and from a brand they trust. Our free ‘Investigate’ tool can give you insight into the current status of the above protocols.

Share Relevant Information

With consumers being bombarded with emails right now, it’s essential to provide relevant and timely information. This is important for two key reasons, with the first being brand reputation. Today, consumers support brands who prioritize transparency and invest in social good. The moment an irrelevant or tone-deaf message comes from a brand, you can bet their consumers are already looking for a new option. The second reason brands should be sharing relevant and timely information is that it increases the odds that your consumers will continue to open and engage with emails in the future. Since the COVID-19 pandemic began in the U.S., email marketers across all industries have seen a 5% increase in newsletter opens. To avoid losing consumer interest and ensure higher engagement, brands must keep an acute pulse on sentiment and share information accordingly. This is especially important during a crisis. 

Be Human in Your Communication

The final essential element when it comes to email marketing is to remember that your customers are humans. Right now everyone is dealing with this crisis in their own way.

Brands can build additional trust with their audiences by considering the unique and uncharted circumstances we’re currently facing. This not only applies to the information you’re sharing, but also the frequency you’re sharing it – now is not the time to fill your customers’ inboxes with incessant messages. Now more than ever, consumers are eager to engage with brands they can rely on during this crisis and will quickly cut out brands who are not providing meaningful content. The most successful marketing campaigns are those that humanize their brand, and connect directly and thoughtfully with their customers.

If you’re looking to get started with DMARC or need support in configuring an existing setup, get in touch with a member of the team or sign up for a 2 week free trial of OnDMARC!

PUBLISHED BY

Red Sift

7 May. 2020

SHARE ARTICLE:

Categories

Recent Posts

VIEW ALL
Product Release

Red Sift’s Quarterly Product Release, Fall 2025

Francesca Rünger-Field

This Fall marks a major expansion of Red Sift Brand Trust with the launch of Social Media Monitoring, a new add-on that helps organizations detect and respond to fraudulent company and executive profiles across platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, and X. By extending protection beyond domains, Brand Trust now gives security teams…

Read more
AI

Red Sift’s AI Agent, Part III: Performance in action

Phong Nguyen

This is the third article in our AI Agent series. In Part 1, we introduced Red Sift’s AI Agent for lookalike classification – an intelligent solution for handling the ambiguous cases that rule-based automation can’t confidently resolve, offering analyst-grade triage autonomously. In Part 2, we took readers behind the scenes to explore the engineering…

Read more
Finance

41% of top Fintech companies are vulnerable to email phishing

Jack Lilley

Only 26% of leading Fintechs enforce DMARC at p=reject, the strongest protection against spoofing by bad actors. Phishing remains a top driver of breaches and fraud. Financial services are a prime target because email moves money, resets passwords, and confirms identity. Verizon’s 2025 Data Breach Investigations Report again lists social engineering and phishing among…

Read more
Certificates

New in Certificates Lite: Active certificate scanning and smarter expiry alerts

Francesca Rünger-Field

A quick recap Earlier this year, we launched Red Sift Certificates Lite, the free TLS certificate expiration monitoring service recommended by Let’s Encrypt. Since launch, thousands of organizations have adopted it to track their certificates and avoid expiry-related outages. What we heard from customers At launch, we had adopted Let’s Encrypt’s approach for consistency…

Read more