If overzealous ISP and corporate spam filters don't cause enough stress for permission-based e-mail marketers, now we must deal with blocked images almost universally. In e-mail clients that block images by default, such as Outlook 2003, a recipient can read an entire column (such as this one) either in the message preview pane or when it's opened. The image-based ads and our dashing photo won't appear (nor will the message be counted as opened). For publishers, advertisers, and e-tailers, this isn't just a nuisance. It's potentially costly.
The Blocked Images Issue
An estimated 95 percent of all commercial e-mail messages are sent in HTML or in a multipart (combined HTML and text) format. Most e-mail includes at least a single external image, even if it's the open-tracking image, a clear, one-pixel GIF image used to track whether an e-mail has been opened.
Blocked E-Mail Images Article >> Posted by: DTB
at 1:41 PM |
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