In this article you will find a collection of tips to help you design accessible emails.
Choose an accessible email template
If you're creating your emails using Delivra's drag-and-drop editor, build or select an email template that is simple and flexible. One or two column layouts are recommended because they are universally easier to read across devices.
Maintain a logical reading order
Screen reader technology reads from left-to-right and from top-to-bottom. For the best experience, make sure your content follows that basic guideline. If you have a two-column email format, the reader will read the left column first and the right column second.
Avoid using tables
Template layouts that use tables to structure elements can be confusing for recipients that are using assistive technology.
Keep your code concise
An email with a lot of superfluous code can stunt loading times in the inbox and cause confusion for accessibility devices. Avoid empty and unclosed tags.
Ensure that your body copy is legible
Call-to-action
You want your CTAs to be a) obvious, b) well contrasted, and c) large enough to easily click on. For buttons, your minimum dimensions should fit your average thumb size – roughly 72 pixels x 44 pixels.
Be sure to convey what the link is leading them to. You’ll want to use something less generic than a “read more” or “click here” CTA. Those can be hard to distinguish with a screen reader. So rather than “to get the full list of sloth habits, click here” try “read the full list of sloth habits”.
Video/Animation
If you are linking to a video, or have a video in your email, include a content warning if it contains any flashing, strobing or otherwise loud or disorienting imagery.
Color blindness
Another important thing to keep in mind is how your email will appear to anyone who is color deficient or colorblind. 1 in 12 men worldwide have some form of colorblindness or color vision deficiency, and 1 in 200 women. Sites like https://webaim.org/resources/contrastchecker/ or https://contrastchecker.com/ and apps like http://colororacle.org/ can help you determine whether or not your color choices will be legible to all your recipients.
Emojis
Be mindful of your use of emojis and do not overuse them. Add emojis to the end of a sentence instead of between words and do not use them to replace words in your message. Avoid using emoticons altogether because the meaning is lost when screen reader tech is being used.
If you have specific questions about accessible email design, please reach out to Support to discuss.