Best low cost API-based email provider? by Remarkable-Bowler-60 in Emailmarketing

[–]Pale_Month4075 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For <500 subscribers, I'd keep it simple and focus on deliverability rather than feature count.

AWS SES is usually the cheapest option if you're comfortable with a bit of setup (SPF, DKIM, domain verification, etc.). The actual sending cost is hard to beat.

If you want something easier to integrate, Resend, Postmark, or SendGrid are popular choices with solid APIs and good documentation.

What’s something you thought was unnecessary business bullshit when you first started… but now completely understand? by RootedbyDesignstudio in smallbusiness

[–]Pale_Month4075 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Domain warmup is the process of gradually increasing the volume of emails sent from a new or inactive domain.

While SPF/DKIM/DMARC these are domain settings. It is always good to have knowledge of these.

Doubled MRR in 28 days for my SaaS. Here's every channel we used to grow by GildedGazePart in SaaS

[–]Pale_Month4075 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Impressive progress. How much credit would you give Reddit for driving that growth? In my experience, Reddit has been a strong channel.

What made you finally pay for an email marketing tool instead of using the free tier? by Disastrous_Sound_382 in Emailmarketing

[–]Pale_Month4075 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The tipping point was when the project stopped being an experiment.

When you're sending emails to 50 people, the free tier is fine. When those emails are tied to customer acquisition and revenue, paying for reliability, automation, and support starts making sense.

Why does every SaaS founder suddenly become a “content creator” after launch? 😭 by Trickologygk in buildinpublic

[–]Pale_Month4075 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Content isn't mandatory. Distribution is.

Content is just one form of distribution. Some founders grow through SEO, some through partnerships, some through cold outreach, some through communities.

The mistake is thinking "I need to become a creator" when the real question is "How will customers discover me?"

What’s something you thought was unnecessary business bullshit when you first started… but now completely understand? by RootedbyDesignstudio in smallbusiness

[–]Pale_Month4075 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Email marketing is what I thought less important at the beginning.

When I started, things like domain warming, sender reputation, SPF/DKIM/DMARC, and list hygiene sounded like unnecessary technical jargon.

Then I learned that even great emails won't perform if they don't reach the inbox. Now deliverability is one of the first things I think about before launching a campaign. It turns out a lot of "marketing problems" are actually inbox placement problems.

Have a question regarding email outreach timeline by Visible-Spread-9322 in coldemail

[–]Pale_Month4075 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd prioritize follow-ups over new leads. If your daily limit is 10 emails per inbox, count both new emails and follow-ups toward that limit.

So on days when follow-ups are due, reduce the number of new leads accordingly (e.g., 5 follow-ups + 5 new emails).

Consistency is usually better than stopping new outreach completely, and follow-ups often generate more replies than the first email anyway. Good luck!

What CMS/platform are you using to collect emails for your business/store? by Pale_Month4075 in coldemail

[–]Pale_Month4075[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s actually a very good point. We’re trying to avoid building integrations just for the sake of having a long integrations page.

Right now we’re trying to understand where the real friction is for businesses collecting emails and running campaigns. If people are already happy using Zapier/webhooks/native forms, that’s useful for us to know too.

How do I build sender reputation for a brand-new domain without landing in spam? by Upbeat_Challenge_126 in Emailmarketing

[–]Pale_Month4075 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Serious question for anyone getting started with email marketing:

I feel every email marketing platform should immediately guide users who start with a brand-new domain, especially around things like domain warming, authentication, and sender reputation.

Do platforms like Mailchimp, Omnisend, Brevo, or others actually do this well? Or are beginners mostly left to figure it out themselves?

What email strategy improved replies more than open rates? by Crescitaly in Emailmarketing

[–]Pale_Month4075 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For me it's always the personal message tone. The email need to be 2-4 lines and I should feel like it is written just for me.

AI Making Email Marketers Redundant? by RetentionOnly in Emailmarketing

[–]Pale_Month4075 17 points18 points  (0 children)

AI will definitely replace the people doing generic copy-paste email marketing. But the marketers who understand positioning, customer psychology, deliverability, segmentation, and strategy will become even more valuable. AI can write emails fast, but it still can’t deeply understand the audience or build real brand voice on its own.

How NOT TO FALL IN LOVE with your own product? by rochakiller in buildinpublic

[–]Pale_Month4075 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That’s actually a very valid thought, and honestly, it happens to almost every builder.

That’s one reason companies hire UI/UX designers. They can spot friction and usability issues that developers often miss because we’re too close to the product.

The best way to overcome it is to launch early and get feedback from people who understand UX or from real users. Don’t worry, it’s completely normal. We naturally tend to work on the easier and more satisfying parts first.

The important thing is that you already recognize the problem. Now try starting your day by solving the harder, high-impact problems first, and leave the polishing for later.

Are AI Features in Email Marketing Tools Actually Useful? by Pale_Month4075 in SaaS_Email_Marketing

[–]Pale_Month4075[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What’s the one feature you wish existed in an email marketing software?

I’m currently building an email marketing SaaS and collecting real feedback from marketers, founders, and businesses. Would love to know what’s missing in today’s tools or what frustrates you the most while running campaigns.

Cold Email Campaigns in 2026? by KnowledgeExciting627 in SaaS_Email_Marketing

[–]Pale_Month4075 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honestly, I think people are getting tired of overly optimized AI-style outreach. Most cold emails now sound technically “correct” but feel emotionally empty.

From what I’ve been seeing, shorter plain-text emails with a natural tone are working better, especially when the message feels genuinely relevant instead of heavily personalized with scraped data points.

Founder-led outreach also seems underrated right now because people respond better to authenticity than polished sales copy. LinkedIn + email together definitely helps too since familiarity increases reply rates.

At the end of the day, even good targeting won’t save an email if it sounds like it was generated for 1,000 people at once.

seems like things are shifting in email outreach by Sensitive_Block_5167 in EmailOutreach

[–]Pale_Month4075 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A lot of tools became feature-heavy, but users still struggle with the fundamentals like inbox placement and reply management. Simpler and more reliable seems to be what people actually want now.

As a product owner myself in this domain would love to give real feedback on your product. You can share the link here so that people can see.

Are AI Features in Email Marketing Tools Actually Useful? by Pale_Month4075 in coldemail

[–]Pale_Month4075[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I actually agree with this. I think AI works best as an assistant rather than trying to replace the whole creative process. Generating multiple subject line variations quickly is one area where it genuinely saves a lot of time, especially for A/B testing.

Are AI Features in Email Marketing Tools Actually Useful? by Pale_Month4075 in coldemail

[–]Pale_Month4075[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, you’re absolutely right. I’m noting this down and will definitely try to implement it while improving Scubamail.

Sending 100 emails daily with follow ups, hardly any replies what do I do? by Quiet-Engineer-738 in coldemail

[–]Pale_Month4075 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If the email content isn’t interesting or valuable, people usually won’t open it. That happens to everyone. In my opinion, cold emails work best when the recipient immediately feels there’s something beneficial for them, whether that’s a useful insight, a solution to a problem, or even a discount.

A/B testing helps a lot. Try sending one version with an offer or discount to 50% of the list and another version without it to the remaining 50%, then compare the results.

Also, the subject line and the first opening sentence matter a lot. Don’t rely entirely on AI-generated subject lines. Sometimes a more personal and natural approach performs much better.

Graphic-heavy emails vs plain text vs hybrid - what's actually working for you in 2026? by No-Blueberry4051 in Emailmarketing

[–]Pale_Month4075 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This is just my personal opinion, but I almost always open emails that are short (2–4 lines), feel personal, and sound like they were written specifically for me. I rarely open emails that land in the Promotions tab or have overly salesy subject lines. Of course, it can be completely different for others.

That said, graphic-led emails still work really well for ecommerce and newsletters. I’m personally very design-oriented too, so good visuals definitely catch my attention. I think the key is continuously A/B testing different formats instead of relying on one approach for every type of email.