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Posts Tagged ‘ HTML email testing ’

This is the billion dollar question. As we’ve discussed here in the past, there are no standards for HTML email. So what looks good in one client (Yahoo) might look like [click] in another (Outlook 2007). Some email marketers, in true K.I.S.S. fashion, recommend keeping the design as basic as possible. Others hire designers to custom build a solid template to work from.

Of course, the whole thing gets even more difficult when there are email client developers, like Microsoft, actually reverting back to older HTML standards for newer email clients, like they did with Outlook 2007 which has less CSS support than the previous version of Outlook had.

But, it’s not a lost cause. There are definitely things that you can do to optimize your HTML so that it will render well in the majority of email clients.

  1. Test your HTML using the w3c Markup Validation Service and fix any major coding errors (like no end tags, etc.)
  2. Use an email testing service ($$) such as Litmus
  3. Do your own testing. Create a test group using as many different email addresses (i.e. Yahoo, Gmail, Hotmail, domain, etc.) and test your messages against them.
  4. Use pre-tested HTML email templates when possible.
  5. Implement the 9 Best Practices for Email Design

One day, thanks to the hard work of the Email Standards Project, we will all celebrate the day when all email is rendered equally. Perhaps we’ll make it an international holiday for email marketers.

Until then, good luck.

Until there are some standards for HTML rendering in email clients and web browsers, or until hell freezes over (whichever comes first), it is a good idea to test your HTML design across the growing number of email clients and web browsers. Litmus (formerly SiteVista) offers both website and HTML email testing services.

Testing both your email and landing page compatibility is important, because having your email rendered properly is only half of the battle. Hopefully, your email recipients are clicking on links within your messages and arriving at your landing page to take the action you want them to. What each recipient sees on your landing page may vary depending on the Internet browser that they use. So, testing your landing page(s) is as important as testing your email message.

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We mentioned this email testing service last year when it was still offered by the SiteVista brand. Now, as Litmus, they have added Yahoo! Mail to the mix or email clients and Opera 9.5 to the list of browsers supported for testing.

They offer a 30-day free trial if you want to give it a whirl.