How Email Lost the Plot
Email once held a privileged place in the relationship between brands and customers. It was direct, persistent, personal, and cheap. A brand did not need to rent an audience from a platform, bid for impressions, or pray that an algorithm would show its message to the right person. It could simply write to the customer. For a time, that was enough. The inbox was sparse, novelty was high, and email still carried something of a letter’s aura. Opening it felt natural.
That world is gone. Most brand email today is not written to be welcomed. It is written to be delivered. The distinction matters. A welcome message is designed around the recipient’s time and attention. A deliverable message is designed around the sender’s campaign calendar and quarterly target. Once brands shifted their mental model from relationship to throughput, the inbox began to fill with messages that were legible but forgettable — sale alerts, cart nudges, reminders, countdowns, and generic newsletters that looked slightly different but felt exactly the same.
When open rates declined, brands did not respond by improving the product. They responded by increasing the pressure. More sends, more urgency, more discounting, more automation, more triggered journeys, more subject-line tricks, more inboxing hacks. Every additional low-value message trained the customer to ignore the next one. Email did not collapse because it became technologically obsolete. It weakened because it stopped being worth opening.
The consequences extend well beyond opens and clicks. Once the inbox loses attention, the customer drifts. A customer who does not open becomes invisible to the brand — even while remaining very real in every other sense. They still know the brand. They may still like it. They are still reachable — just not through the messages the brand currently sends. This is where the reacquisition trap begins. The marketer, unable to activate the customer through owned channels, turns to Google or Meta to win back someone whose email address already sits in the database. The brand pays twice: first to acquire the customer, then again to reacquire that same customer after the relationship has gone cold. This is AdWaste at its most absurd — renting back attention you already owned.
So the crisis is not that email has failed as a medium. The crisis is that email has been reduced to two narrow roles: transaction and promotion. It can still deliver. It can still scale. But to matter again, it needs a third job — one designed not to extract, but to earn. Email did not die. It just stopped being worth opening. The next act begins by fixing that.

