What guidelines for HTML email design are there? [closed]
Solution 1:
It's actually really hard to make a decent HTML email, if you approach it from a 'modern HTML and CSS' perspective.
For best results, imagine it's 1999.
- Go back to tables for layout (or preferably - don't attempt any complex layout)
- Be afraid of background images (they break in Outlook 2007 and Gmail).
- The style-tag-in-the-body thing is because Hotmail used to accept it that way - I'm pretty sure they strip it out now though. Use inline styles with the
style
attribute if you must use CSS. - Forget entirely about
float
- Remember your images will probably be blocked - use background and text colour to your advantage - make sure there is some readable text with images disabled
- Be very careful with links, be especially wary of anything that looks like a URL in the link text - you will anger 'phishing' filters (eg
<a href="http://domain.tld">www.someotherdomain.tld</a>
is bad) - Remember that the "fold" on webmail clients tends to be extremely high up the page (on a 1024x768 screen, most interfaces won't show more than a hundred pixels or so) - get your identity stuff in right at the top so the recipient knows who you are.
- Recent version of outlook have a "portrait" preview pane which is significantly narrower than you may be expecting - be very wary of fixed-width layouts, if you must use them, make them as narrow as you can.
- Don't even think about flash, Javascript, SVG, canvas, or anything like that.
- Test, a lot. Make sure you test in a recent Outlook (things have changed a lot! It now uses Word as its HTML rendering engine, and it's crippled: Word 2007 HTML/CSS support). Gmail is pretty finicky also. Surprisingly Yahoo's webmail is extremely good, with nice CSS support.
Good luck ;)
Update to answer further questions:
Don't use more than two levels of nesting in tables
I believe this is an older guideline pertaining to Lotus Notes. Nested tables should be okay, but really, if you have a layout that's complicated enough to need them, you're probably going to have trouble anyway. Keep your layout simple.
Be careful of nesting background images in cells/tables
This may be related to the above, and the same applies, if you're getting that complicated then you will have problems. Recent versions of Outlook don't support background images at all, so you'd be best advised to forget about them entirely.
Solution 2:
Always use multipart mime and provide a plain text alternative.