Ask How do I use digital marketing to get subscribers to click on an image in an email?

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To make people click on an image in your email, you must first make that image really appealing and relevant to what you are talking about in the text. The best thing you can do is make the image itself a clickable link that takes them right where you want them to go, like a product page, because people often click on pictures more than plain text links. It is also smart to put your main call-to-action, like a "Shop Now" button, as an image, but make sure you also have a text link nearby in case the recipient's email program blocks images from showing up. Remember to keep the image file size small so it loads fast, because if it takes too long, people will just scroll past it before it even shows up. What is your experience with using animated pictures, like GIFs, to get more clicks?
 
For a digital marketer thanks making use of image, there is a need to make sure that the image matches the products that you are promoting. Apart from that, you need to make sure that you optimise your image and let it be too large for the users to load it fast
 
It seems like making the picture itself a button is a good move for getting more clicks. If you link the image straight to where you want them to go, people don't have to hunt for a separate button link. That small step saved might be what gets someone to actually click.
 
You should really think about what the picture is showing and if it matches the email's main point well. If the image is just there to look pretty but doesn't really talk about the offer or the news, people might get confused or just ignore it.
 
If the picture file is too big, it takes ages to show up, and most people won't wait around for that. Making sure the image size is small enough to pop up right away is super important for getting any clicks at all.
 
I wonder if using some kind of text inside the image itself helps guide the eye. Like, putting a small "Click Here" or "See More" right on the picture could make it obvious what the next step is. It adds a second layer of instruction right where they are looking.
 
Don't forget about people who have their email settings blocking pictures by default, which happens a lot. If the image doesn't show, you need to put some good alternative text there so they know what they are missing. That text should still encourage them to click if they can enable images later.
 
One thing to focus on is making the image feel important, not just decoration. If the image looks like part of the message and clearly shows what someone will get, people are more likely to tap it. Adding a short line of text near it can guide attention without making the email too long.
 

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