For years, the primary goal of event email marketing was simple — get into the inbox. Build a clean list, maintain healthy delivery rates, avoid the spam folder. Do those things well, and your message had a fighting chance.
That bar has moved.
AI-powered tools — like Gmail’s Priority Inbox, smart summaries and inbox assistants — are now sitting between your send and your audience’s attention. They filter, collapse and rank before a human even accesses their email server. Permission isn’t the hurdle anymore. Being chosen is.
This doesn’t mean that email is broken. It means the standard for what earns attention has gotten higher. And for event marketers who rely on cadence-driven campaigns, it’s worth asking a harder question with every send: Is this an email that AI will prioritize for my audience?
The Problem With Sequence-First Thinking
Event email has always followed a familiar rhythm: save the date, registration open, early bird, last chance, see you there. That sequence still works, so long as each email is intentional, containing timely and relevant information.
The issue isn’t the cadence. It’s when the next email goes out simply because it’s next — not because it’s earned its place. Volume without value is becoming a liability. Inbox algorithms are learning what readers pay attention to, and a string of low-engagement sends can quietly erode your standing — regardless of your technical delivery rate.
The shift isn’t “send less.” It’s “send with more intention.”
What Changes When You Lead With Value
A few practical adjustments tend to move the needle:
- Send from a name your audience recognizes. That might be the event brand, the organization or, in the right context, a specific person. Emails should never come from noreply@ or info@ addresses. Every email should be from an address someone can actually reply to, because that’s part of what signals legitimacy to people and algorithms.
- Give your audience something worth their time. A session preview, a practical insight, a reason this event matters to them specifically. Logistics — dates, deadlines, links — are important details, but outside of time-sensitive moments (e.g., early bird registration is ending) should not be the main focus. In other words, repeating the dates and location of an event will have your email fighting for attention in any inbox.
- Test with a hypothesis, not just a habit. A/B testing is only useful when there’s something learnable at stake. Comparing two subject lines without a clear hypothesis will not give you the insight you need to make effective changes. Test one variable at a time — length, personalization, framing — and apply what you find.
- Don’t stop at the event. A strong post-event email — one with real content, not just a thank-you — builds the audience for next year. The relationship doesn’t end when registration closes.
The Test Worth Applying to Every Send
Pull up the last three emails from your campaign. For each, ask yourself: If someone’s inbox assistant was triaging messages, how would it prioritize this one? Is the right information included — in the right way — to determine that this email needs to be seen?
If the answer to the second question isn’t clearly yes, that’s where more work is needed. Not every email needs to be a production, but the goal is no longer just hitting an inbox. It’s creating easily discernable value-driven emails that actually make it in front of your audience.
