
“We’ve all been taught the wrong fundamentals when it comes to email,” says O’Malley. Turns out Beth is not here to politely polish old assumptions. She wants a reset.
Beth O’Malley will be presenting at the DDMA Email Marketing Automation Summit 11 June with her session called “The Email Reset: Strategy, Behaviour, and Performance in 2026″
Ahead of her session, she sat down with email marketing consultant Jordie van Rijn to talk about inbox psychology, broken email foundations, deliverability, AI, intent-based marketing, and why brands need to stop treating email like a machine and start treating it like human communication.
The great email reset
Your talk is called the great email reset. What is it that needs resetting? And why do we need it now?
Beth: What the Great Email Reset is really about is resetting how we think about email, expectations, objectives and of course, resetting what we think success actually looks like.
Because I think we’ve all been taught the wrong fundamentals when it comes to email. A lot of the current email philosophy is heavily shaped by e-commerce and performance marketing.
We’ve been taught that email means ROI. That it is a revenue-generating channel, so optimise opens and clicks, capturing attention. And we’ve been taught “best practices” that are heavily outdated and some just incorrect.
How we use our inboxes is different from what marketers think.
Beth continues: “The inbox is utility-driven. In our personal lives we use email because we have to. It’s where order confirmations go, travel details, insurance documents, conversations about buying houses, important documents, important information.
And then in our professional lives, it becomes even more task-oriented. No matter how many tools businesses introduce like Slack or Teams, email is still the primary communication tool for work for most people. So psychologically, people enter the inbox differently.
You enter it with purpose, you enter it to complete tasks, you enter it to process information.
Not to endlessly browse. It’s always one thing: to check.
And when you understand that, you start to realise that inbox behaviour is completely different to social or site behaviour. Even down to how people scan information, look at the design, make decisions, and how their eyes move across the screen.
Contrast that to how we use social media. Social media is passive; it’s entertainment, it’s browsing and it fills our brains with dopamine hits.”
Most email best practice ignores the way that we use the inbox
We’ve become obsessed with whether one email got slightly more opens, instead of looking at email as a relationship-building channel over time. Because really, email should be nurturing, supporting, informing, and helping somebody move through a journey with you.
Are we delivering value consistently?
Are we building trust?
Are we helping somebody?
Are we creating a return on relationship rather than just chasing short-term performance?
That’s what The Great Email Reset is really about.
It’s resetting how we think about email, resetting expectations, resetting what success actually looks like and resetting your objectives.
How does AI influence the need for looking differently at Email?
I think we need a reset now more than ever because AI and automation are accelerating everything.
We’re constantly being told to do more with less, generate more results, move faster and automate more. Plug this tool into this tool, and suddenly your email performance magically improves. But in a lot of ways, we’re just accelerating bad habits, approaches and expectations.
So for me, the reset is actually really simple. If we fundamentally understand what the inbox is for, how human beings behave inside it, and how people naturally process communication, email becomes significantly more effective.
And ironically, when you stop treating email like a machine and start treating it more like human communication, the commercial results usually improve too.
Email market trends and how to ignore them
What can email marketers learn from trends they see? We know you are a bit weary of just following what others are doing. So, what is your beef with trends?
The thing that I don’t believe in with email, first of all, is trends. You can’t have an email trend. There are no such thing as trends in the inbox.
And I’ll give you probably one of the best examples of this, which is the Mother’s Day and Father’s Day opt-out campaigns. Ultimately, this became a trend. One brand did something, everybody praised it, thought it was amazing, really emotive, really thoughtful, and then every other brand jumped on it.
So what started as one thoughtful campaign turned into every single brand doing the exact same thing. And what we started seeing in the UK, was consumers receiving huge numbers of these emails. And the original intention gets completely lost.
Because if somebody has lost their mum, and they receive 20 or 30 emails asking if they want to opt out of Mother’s Day campaigns, it stops feeling thoughtful. It stops feeling kind. It actually becomes emotionally exhausting because you are repeatedly forcing somebody to revisit the same emotional trigger over and over again.
And this is one of the biggest problems in email, everybody thinks their audience only sees their email. People think if they make their email clever enough or emotional enough or good enough, people will ignore everything else in the inbox. But that’s not how the inbox works.
Your email doesn’t live in isolation. The complete media and inbox consumption including what people are receiving from other brands and companies shape how they experience your email. And in turn, how they engage with you.
The idea of trends in email is flawed because you can’t control what else your audience is receiving around you. This is another massive reason why we need this reset.
How about copying or “getting very heavily inspired” by examples from others?
We’ve created this culture of copying. People go onto email inspiration galleries, “really good email” sites, award sites, LinkedIn posts, and everybody is trying to copy what somebody else has done because they think, well, it worked for them so it must work for us.
But like everything in marketing, it depends. It depends on your audience, your relationship with them, your goals, your brand, your timing, your positioning, your trust levels, all of it.
And with email specifically, copy-and-paste marketing just doesn’t work in the way people think it does because everybody ends up sounding and looking the same.
The other side of this is deliverability, and this is another reason we desperately need a reset, because spam filters and inbox providers are finally catching up with brands that have spent years just blasting emails to entire databases without really understanding strategy, audience behaviour, or even the laws around the inbox itself.
The other big thing is volume. Since COVID especially, email volume has massively increased and I don’t think we’ve really recovered from that. Everybody is sending more, more campaigns, more automations, more nurture journeys, more sales emails, more newsletters, more AI-generated content.
A lot of businesses got very comfortable just sending everything to everyone, following a calendar, pushing volume, repeating campaigns, and now they’re suddenly finding that what they used to get away with doesn’t work anymore because inbox providers are becoming stricter to protect the user experience.
And I always say there are laws of the inbox; deliverability is absolutely one of them. Inside that you’ve got reputation, engagement, list quality, trust, consistency, authentication, audience behaviour, all of these different things that now matter more than ever.
So for me, the reason we need the reset comes down to all of this combined, we’ve got trend culture, copy-and-paste marketing, rising email volume, AI accelerating content creation, worsening inbox experiences, and stricter deliverability systems, but underneath all of that is still the same issue: brands are forgetting they are communicating with human beings inside a shared environment.
Shattering the email glass ceiling for better results
You talk about the email glass ceiling. What do marketers need to catch up on?
What I see constantly with marketers is what I call the email glass ceiling. It’s like Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, you can’t do the next layer until you’ve properly optimised the layer underneath it. It is more of an inverted pyramid, but the principle is the same.
And at the bottom of that hierarchy sits your three pillars of email:
* your systems,
* your strategy, and
* your data.
I’ve trained thousands of marketers across the world, I work with marketing teams every single year, and one of the biggest frustrations I see is marketers being expected to generate better and better results whilst working within broken foundations.
They’re expected to build automations, improve revenue, use AI, personalise journeys, increase engagement, but one or more of their three pillars is either broken, messy, outdated, disconnected, or just fundamentally not fit for purpose.
And that creates an email glass ceiling. There comes a point when no matter how talented the marketer is, they physically cannot get better results because the foundations underneath them are limiting what’s possible.
So if your systems are not integrated properly, there’s your first glass ceiling. If your CRM and your email platform are disconnected, your data is already out of date the second you export and import it. You are constantly working reactively instead of strategically.
If your data is messy, incomplete, badly structured, or you’re not collecting the right information, data quality and list hygiene is another glass ceiling because you cannot do proper intent-based marketing, segmentation, automation, or personalisation without good data.
And if your strategy is weak, if email is just “send a newsletter every Tuesday because that’s what we’ve always done”, there’s another part of the glass ceiling.
How is this different from 2 or 3 years ago?
So I think one of the biggest differences now versus even two years ago is that marketers need to become much more aware of what is realistically possible within the environment they are working in.
What are the expectations being placed on them?
What are the actual capabilities of their systems, strategy, and data?
What sits inside their circle of control?
And what actually requires business-wide transformation to achieve?
Because I think marketers have been carrying a huge amount of pressure to produce better results from environments that fundamentally aren’t designed for modern email marketing.
Jordie adds: “If you look at it from a zoomed out marketing perspective, the email marketing and life cycle role is, in cases, marginalised to only mean Promotion.
But you can’t see separately from Product, Price, Place, and all those other Ps and Cs that influence the outcome. Remember Michael Porter, remember 4 to 7Ps of Marketing, and I even think Mark Ritson is correct in saying Product is what you want to influence.
So we should take back the discussion into the sphere of influence, where you can adjust things: Adjust propositions, segments, make your own landing pages, change pricing and discount offers, go arrange partnerships to grow your list.
Revolt, Revolution, Relevancy! (ok sorry about the mini-rant, but this may need a reset of its own :P) “
The second thing is deliverability.
Beth brings up the second issue: If somebody came into email marketing today and ignored deliverability, they would already be behind. Because even if your strategy never changes, even if you’re just a business sending a newsletter every Tuesday from a content calendar, understanding deliverability alone could dramatically improve your results.
If more of your emails reach the inbox, that is already a win.
You don’t necessarily need to completely reinvent your strategy overnight. Sometimes the biggest issue is simply that a significant percentage of your audience is not even seeing your emails because they are landing in spam, promotions, junk folders, or being filtered entirely.
And the problem is most marketers have never properly been taught deliverability.
It’s become one of the biggest areas I specialise in because there’s very little education out there that properly teaches marketers how to understand it, monitor it, audit it, track it, or know what to actually do when there’s a problem.
Most people stop at, “we think we’re going into spam.”
Okay, but why?
What caused it?
What signals are inbox providers seeing?
What behaviour is damaging your reputation?
What does healthy engagement actually look like?
How do you recover from it?
There’s a huge gap there.
Human behaviour in the inbox
You mentioned the behavior in the inbox before is a reason for the reset, let’s zoom in on that a bit. What is
Understanding human behaviour in the inbox is a marketers’ job. Because when I talk about inbox psychology, most people instantly relate to it personally. Everybody suddenly goes, “yeah actually, I barely click marketing emails myself.”
It’s always a minority of people who actively open, click, engage, and convert from email. That’s normal human behaviour. So when you understand inbox psychology properly, you stop chasing impossible expectations and you start approaching email differently.
You can become more creative, more strategic, more thoughtful, because you stop treating every single campaign like it has to “win” immediately.
Ironically, when marketers lower some of those unrealistic expectations and start understanding how people naturally behave inside the inbox, they usually end up getting much better results anyway.
Young talent and personal growth for marketers
We have an award at the Email Summit that goes into Young talent and often winning cases are driven by individual people (and their teams). What would a marketer need to get the label “Queen of CRM” like you?
I think the first thing is to fail repeatedly and be really open to changing your own beliefs and mindset. Where I am today is very, very different to where I was five years ago and even the things I used to teach or talk about five years ago. My thinking has evolved massively through experience, through projects, through things not working, through being wrong.
And I think one of the biggest misconceptions people have is that experts somehow know everything or never fail, and that’s just not true.
I fail all the time!
I would never sit here and say, give me any business and I can absolutely guarantee I’ll transform their email marketing overnight because everything depends. Every business is different, every audience is different, every system is different, every challenge is different.
I still make mistakes. I still sometimes get things wrong. I still test things that don’t work.
But I actually think being wrong teaches you the most important lessons.
A huge amount of what I know now has come from failure, from pressure, from troubleshooting, from projects going sideways, from having to figure things out in real time.
And I think being self-employed accelerated that learning massively for me because I work across so many different businesses, industries, systems, teams, and problems all at once. You see patterns really quickly, you learn really quickly, and you develop this ability to connect dots across completely different environments.
So I think the first thing is being willing to fail and evolve your thinking instead of becoming too attached to your own opinions.
Being confident is a huge win for marketers.
The second thing is confidence. And I don’t mean arrogance, I mean genuinely believing in yourself and your knowledge enough to put your voice out there.
Because no one is going to magically turn around one day and crown you “the queen of CRM”. If anything, the title itself is a bit cringey and a bit tongue-in-cheek, but I knew very early on that if I wanted to educate people, help people, and genuinely change parts of the industry, I needed to stand for something.
I needed people to remember me, see my point of view, and have confidence in my own voice. Because if you don’t believe in yourself, nobody else is going to believe in you either.
And I think the other really important thing is having an opinion and being willing to say something different.
Not for the sake of being controversial, but because you genuinely believe it.
Everything I teach, every framework I’ve built, every piece of education I put out there comes from years of experience, testing, failing, observing patterns, and understanding what fundamentally works in the real world.
And I think people connect with that because it’s coming from experience, not theory.
So for me, becoming really good at CRM, email, strategy, any of it, comes from a combination of failure, curiosity, confidence, experience, and being brave enough to challenge things that you don’t think are right anymore.
Jordie adds: “This is such an important part. I’d say confidence isn’t a state of mind, but a reflection of confident actions and what you say. In a relaxed way. Confident people are the most relaxed people in the room. If you at least act confident, mindset will follow over time.
Put yourself in an environment that stimulates growth and initiative. Help shape that environment for yourself – every day again. Not throwing things “over the fence”. It may just be the key to unlock a bonus-tier and wind at your back for everything that you as a marketer do. An all star marketeer, if you have the chops, reputation works for you, just like a top athlete for instance.
It is good to keep in mind: Brand management wants you to take initiative and to succeed, or if you are external, your contact wants their agency and freelancer to go the extra mile. And if you can’t lay your creative eggs in work, start a side quest and your own newsletter, personal brand on social.
To make it practical: Often marketers tend to get in a discussion about details and get a lot of feedback, that just drags out the process. And often where it isn’t needed.
For example I often remind myself and use these three:
“If we both have opinions on what works best, let’s go with my opinion, because that is what you hired me for.” and
“Design like you are absolutely right, then test like you were wrong from the start.”
“You can have a look if you want, but I am not asking you to review it”
What are some “assumptions / best practices” that aren’t really best practices in your eyes anymore?
Beth: I think the overarching thing with best practice is that every single marketer I meet just wants to know they’re doing things the “right” way.
And I completely get that because as humans, we don’t like getting things wrong. We don’t like the idea that there’s potentially a better way of doing something and we’re not doing it yet.
So a lot of the time when marketers go to webinars or events or training, they’re in part just looking for validation. They want someone to tell them, yes, that’s right, yes, you’re doing the right thing, yes, that’s best practice.
And the question I get constantly is, “what should we be doing?” Like, what should we be doing that we’re not doing already? What’s the right thing? What’s the best practice?
And underneath that is usually fear. Fear of getting it wrong, fear that another brand is doing something better, fear that there’s some secret formula everybody else knows about.
But I actually think the businesses that become the most successful are usually the ones that embrace getting things wrong because they understand that’s actually how you learn what works.
And I think one of the biggest assumptions in email is this idea that if we follow all the best practices, we’ll automatically get results. Marketing unfortunately doesn’t work like that.
And I know that because I used to be that marketer. I remember being in-house and genuinely thinking that if I just learned all the frameworks, followed all the advice, implemented all the best practices properly, then of course it would work.
But everything in marketing depends.
It depends on your audience, your positioning, your timing, your strategy, your relationship with your audience, your brand, your skills, your systems, all of it.
One of the biggest problems is that the industry takes practices and labels them as universal truths.
And I think once marketers stop obsessing over getting everything “perfect” and instead focus more on understanding people, testing properly, learning from failure, and understanding their own audience, they usually become much better marketers.
Jordie adds: “It helps to think of your strategy as a start-egy instead. You start with the plan you trust has a solid chance to succeed, put together considering the environment and restrictions. But the strategy isn’t the main part of the success, it is the starting and doing. The plan should change over time anyway (and it will).”
Beth: Yes, and for instance in tactics, a really good example is, your call-to-action should always be above the fold.
Again, that’s not a best practice, that’s a technique. It might work brilliantly in one email and terribly in another depending on the audience, the message, the intent, the design, the device, the context, all sorts of different things.
So I think marketers need to stop looking for universal rules in email because there really aren’t many.
Most things in email are practices, techniques, approaches, guiding principles, things that need to be adapted to your audience and environment.
How does a marketer go and make sure they are serving their audience, rather than doing hacks that work?
Beth: It’s quite rare that I look at an email and think, wow, that tactic was genius.
For me, the smartest email marketers are very rarely the ones doing flashy things or clever hacks or weird growth tactics. The smartest ones are usually the ones that deeply, deeply understand their audience.
And I think there’s a really big difference there.
I definitely see marketers who already know exactly what they want to do strategically, but they’re restricted by tools, systems, budget, internal sign-off, data quality, all those kinds of things. A lot of marketers are actually far smarter than the environments they’re working in allow them to be.
One campaign that always sticks in my mind was an abandoned basket journey.
What impressed me wasn’t the design or the copy or some crazy tactic, it was the way she understood the psychology behind why people abandon baskets in the first place.
Because most abandoned basket emails are really assumptive. They basically go, “hey, you forgot this” or “you left this behind.”
But most people didn’t “forget”, most people deliberately leave things in baskets. An abandoned basket is usually an open question. It’s uncertainty. It’s hesitation. It’s somebody thinking, “I’m not sure yet.”
So instead of treating abandoned basket like a reminder campaign, she treated it like a trust-building and objection-handling campaign.
The whole journey was built around answering questions, reducing uncertainty, building confidence, reinforcing value, adding trust signals, helping people make a decision.
She understood that maybe the person thought it was too expensive, maybe they didn’t fully understand the value yet, maybe they were comparing alternatives, maybe they just weren’t emotionally ready to buy at that moment.
And because she understood the audience psychology so well, the performance was incredible. A really great e-commerce marketer I worked with did this, I think the abandoned basket journey had something like an 87% conversion rate. It was genuinely one of the best-performing journeys I’ve ever seen.
But again, it wasn’t because of some magical tactic.
It was because she understood people. And I think that’s probably the biggest compliment I can give any marketer. When I receive an email and I genuinely feel like somebody understood me, understood where I was at, understood what I needed at that exact moment, that’s when I’m impressed.
Those are the emails that get a little round of applause from me, and usually a reply as well, because I actually like marketers knowing when they’ve done a really good job
What about the tools and software?
Beth: The first thing I always say when people ask me about tools is that the tool is very, very rarely actually the problem.
People constantly ask me things like, what’s the best email service provider, what platform should we move to, what tool should we be using, and my answer is usually… none of them, or all of them, because fundamentally most email service providers now all do very similar things.
They all have automations, segmentation, reporting, templates, AI features, all of that stuff.
So for me, the tool itself is rarely the thing holding people back.
What actually matters is your three pillars, your systems, your strategy, and your data, and I’d actually say data is probably the biggest one there because the real power of tools comes when you have integrated data and a proper source of truth across the business. That’s when tools become more useful.
So for me it’s always data over tools.
In terms of features and new things coming out, there honestly isn’t really a feature where I’ve looked at it and gone, wow, that completely changes everything.
I think the things that are interesting are anything that helps marketers understand people better, analyse behaviour better, identify patterns faster, anything around predictive analysis, intent signals, things that help marketers process information quicker, those are useful.
Anything that speeds up operational tasks is useful as well, like helping build emails faster or helping structure things faster, but I don’t think any of it replaces the audience brief or the strategy layer.
Jordie adds: “I help companies select email marketing software for over 10 years – and guide dozens of RFPs and selection questions. More than anyone out there. My experience tells a picture – where I agree with Beth that foundations are… foundations so you have to get that right.
But the right Marketing can really make the difference between success and frustration.
It is the same point as Beth makes, but a layer on top. I have seen so many teams be frustrated by the tooling that was over-promissing, inherited, or it is a great tool, but not the best fit for the team and job they wanted to do. A hammer is great for hammering, not so much for baking a cake. Making the wrong decision can set you back a year, year and a half – you may even fail the implementation and need to start over.
To give you a simple example that explains it all:
In a selection I guided, there was a team that had to manage international versions of each mailing. In the tool they had that was terrible. Another could do it, but still would take about 20 hrs a week. Another (they didn’t know about, but we ended up selecting) they brought that international email process back to 2 or 3 hours a week. That makes all the difference.”
Everybody is looking at AI – what are your thoughts on that?
Beth continues: I’ve seen loads online around AI agents that can supposedly run your entire email programme for you, build campaigns for you, write everything for you, optimise everything for you, and are we there yet? No. We’re absolutely not there yet.
And I’ve always said this, if you already don’t understand email strategy, inbox psychology, audience behaviour, all the philosophy stuff I talk about, AI just allows you to produce more bad content faster.
You might get slightly more output, you might even get slightly better results because you’re producing more volume, but fundamentally it doesn’t solve the underlying issue.
And I also think people massively underestimate how much time they spend trying to fix AI outputs.
I’ve literally watched people spend half an hour rewriting prompts, tweaking wording, correcting tone, trying to make something sound human, changing bits over and over again, and at some point you have to ask yourself, is this actually saving time?
Or are you trying to use AI to replace a skill gap that still fundamentally needs human thinking behind it?
AI is not magically fixing poor strategy.
The AI tools I genuinely use and would struggle without now are mostly around data analysis, pattern recognition, helping process large amounts of information quickly, helping identify trends or gaps faster, that’s where I think AI is genuinely very powerful right now.
But when it comes to replacing human understanding, audience psychology, strategic thinking, relationship building, understanding nuance, emotion, timing, context, I just don’t think we’re there yet.
Jordie adds: “Generative AI really already heightened the bar, and changed what interesting content has to look like in 2026. Think about what you can do with images, video, writing and coding. The development in those areas is phenomenal. Marketers feel the mix of excitement mixed with tears and fear for the future.
And there is no way to keep up with the latest (shiny) things in all areas. The worst thing to do is put your head in the sand and pretend this isn’t happening, second-worst is to believe all the hype and mass delusion. AI email writing tools, for instance, have gotten verrrryyy good. Already general models like ChatGPT and Claude are so good, if you know how to use them. You can choose to use AI tools or use handwritten and a mix. Just make sure you do it for the right reasons.”
Practical tips to improve email performance
Beth concludes with some practical tips:
I think the first thing, as I’ve said already, is deliverability, because if your emails are landing in spam, that’s your biggest issue right now.
The more people that actually see your emails, especially the right people, your warmest audience, your highest intent audience, the people most likely to engage with you, that alone can massively improve performance without changing loads of other things.
The other big practical strategy for me is intent-based email marketing, and I really don’t think this is spoken about enough.
And actually, I don’t really believe in personalisation anymore, at least not in the way it’s been pushed out into the industry for years, where personalisation basically became putting someone’s first name in a subject line or dynamically changing a product block.
I’m much more interested in intent.
Because intent tells you where somebody is psychologically.
Intent-based email marketing is really about understanding what somebody has shown you or told you through their behaviour. That could be warm intent, cold intent, hot intent, but your hot intent is the most important because that’s where somebody is actively trying to solve a problem or make a decision.
And I think marketers need to become much better at creating intent buckets.
So instead of just blasting campaigns to everyone, you’re asking yourself, okay, what has this person shown me, what have they told me, what behaviour have they demonstrated that means I now need to send this message at this exact moment?
Because your audience is constantly giving you signals.
That could be form submissions, website visits, webinar attendance, pricing page views, content downloads, product browsing, all sorts of things.
And this is where I always recommend doing a TFDS exercise, thinking, feeling, doing, saying.
If somebody is showing intent, what are they thinking? What are they feeling? What are they doing? What are they saying? And you map everything out.
Are they uncertain?
Are they comparing options?
Are they Googling solutions?
Are they talking about this internally?
Have they written it on a to-do list?
What objections do they have?
What unanswered questions do they have?
Because that then can become your content strategy.
So for example, from a B2B perspective, if somebody downloads a lead magnet around email deliverability, then visits my certification programme pages multiple times, then starts reading all my deliverability blogs, especially the more problem-focused ones, I already know that person likely has a deliverability issue they’re trying to solve.
That’s intent.
So I’m going to activate that person differently because they’ve shown me where they are psychologically and commercially.
Or from a B2C perspective, let’s say somebody completes a hair quiz on a haircare website, browses loads of products afterwards, spends time looking around, then leaves the site.
Most brands immediately jump to discounts or promo codes.
But actually, that person probably has uncertainty. They probably have unanswered questions. They’re not fully convinced yet. They’re still evaluating.
And because they completed the quiz, they’ve already given you loads of information about themselves that you can now use intelligently.
So instead of sending generic abandoned browse emails, you create an intent-based journey around the likely uncertainty they’re experiencing.
And for me, intent-based email marketing will almost always outperform generic campaigns because it’s based on what somebody has actively shown you or told you.
So one of the biggest practical things marketers can do immediately is go and look at everything they already track.
What are people filling in on forms?
What behaviour are they showing?
What signals are they giving you?
What intent can you identify?
And then start grouping people into intent buckets.
The other thing I’d say is marketers need to get much better at understanding what metrics actually matter and understanding the impact email has outside of opens and clicks because opens and clicks only tell you a very small part of the story.
A lot of the things I talk about around intent, inbox psychology, relationship-building, deliverability, all of that stuff, I write about a lot anyway, so honestly the best thing I’d recommend is just going through my blog because everything I teach is built around these principles and practical application rather than generic email advice.
Beth O’Malley is the Founder of astral, an unstoppable CRM and email marketing expert (and an ADHDer with a great sense of humour).
She’s trained thousands of marketers, developed industry-shaping guidelines, practices and training. Plus, she’s helped businesses generate £10M+ in assisted revenue from her expertise in just 18 months.
She’s been awarded best Full-Service CRM & Email Agency 2024, Top International Women Entrepreneurs, and a recognised HubSpot Partner. Beth helps businesses reimagine, rethink and transform CRM, data, and email marketing. You can connect with her on Linkedin and read her blog “the Vault”
This article was written by Jordie van Rijn independent email marketing consultant and founder of Email Vendor Selection.
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