🔍 What Research & Experts Say
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Sending 2 to 3 emails per week often hits a “sweet spot” in many industries. More than that can lead to diminishing returns or higher unsubscribe rates. Campaign Monitor
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A good starting baseline is 1 email per week, then adjust based on how your audience responds. Sanctuary – A Digital Marketing Group+1
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In e-commerce, some brands send 1–3 emails per week and find that balance of engagement vs. fatigue. Omnisend
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Overdoing it (daily or many emails per day) tends to raise unsubscribe rates and fatigue. Mailjet+1
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Let your subscribers have a say: include preference settings so they can choose how often they hear from you. Campaign Monitor+1
đź§ How to Pick the Right Frequency for Your Business
Here’s a strategy you can follow:
| Step | Action | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Set your goals | Decide what your emails aim to achieve (sales, retention, branding, content value). | Your content type influences how often you should email. |
| 2. Segment your list | New subscribers, highly engaged users, dormant users, etc. | Different segments may tolerate different email volumes. |
| 3. Start with a baseline | For example, 1 email/week | It’s safer to begin moderate and adjust. |
| 4. Monitor key metrics | Track open rate, click-through rate, unsubscribes, complaints | These reveal whether your frequency is too high or too low |
| 5. Adjust gradually | If metrics are good, try increasing frequency for one segment; if not, reduce | Small changes make it easier to see cause and effect |
| 6. Offer subscriber control | Let people choose daily, weekly, or monthly emails | Increases satisfaction and reduces unsubscribes |
âś… Summary & Rule of Thumb
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A solid starting point: 1 email per week
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Many businesses end up in the 2–3 per week range
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Anything above that needs strong content, segmentation, and testing
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Always test and listen to your audience — what works for others might not work for you