The first email someone gets from you sets the tone for the entire relationship. Get it right and you earn permission, attention, and a habit. Get it wrong and you become noise. Here's what we learned breaking down 200 high-performing welcome emails.
Welcome emails are the highest-engagement message most brands ever send — open rates routinely above 50%, often double a normal campaign. People asked to hear from you, and they're paying attention. Yet most welcome emails waste that moment on a generic "thanks for subscribing" and a logo.
1. Lead with one clear next step
The biggest predictor of a welcome email that works is a single, obvious call to action. Not five links to your social accounts and a blog. One thing you want them to do next — start a setup, complete a profile, claim an offer, or just reply.
- Pick the one action that signals a new subscriber is becoming a real customer.
- Put it above the fold, as a real button, in your brand colour.
- Remove every competing link that isn't that action.
If a new subscriber does exactly one thing after opening, what should it be? Design the whole email around that answer.
2. Sound like a person, not a press release
The best-performing welcomes read like a short note from a founder or a thoughtful teammate. Warm, specific, and brief. Drop the corporate "we are pleased to" and write the way you'd actually talk.
3. Set expectations
Tell people what they signed up for and how often they'll hear from you. A single line — "expect a short note every Sunday" — measurably reduces unsubscribes down the line because it replaces uncertainty with a promise.
The structure we keep coming back to
- A warm one-line greeting that uses their name.
- One sentence of value — why being here is good for them.
- One primary button — the single next step.
- A human sign-off and a clear way to reply.
Make it yours in minutes
You don't need an agency or an afternoon to ship a welcome email this good. Describe your brand and goal in Letters, and you'll get several finished, on-brand directions to choose from — then tweak the copy, lock it as a template, and let it run as the first step of your welcome flow.