![]() ![]() RED comes in two versions, Business, priced at $199, and Personal, priced at $69. Moreover, the documentation could be a whole lot better which is obvious from the Responsive Email Designer Quick Start Guide which reads “More to come…” at the end of the Responsive Email Design section, posted on Jan 28, 2015. My complaints? While learning RED isn’t hard neither is it as simple as it could be. If you’ve upgraded RED you can have your images and captured form data hosted on Coffeecup’s servers. There are also preview and testing features and email list management built-in although this feature oddly lacks importing and exporting from sources such as CSV files. RED helps you build email content around the concept of campaigns, supports sending via Gmail, Outlook, Yahoo, AOL, iCloud, or any SMTP account (optionally, and for a price, you can send using CoffeeCup’s bulk mail service to avoid problems with bulk mailing from user accounts). An important part of RED is a bar across the top of the editor that allows you to resize the width of the layout and set breakpoints (media queries) that make it easy to engineer the layout for different size screen sizes (the only thing missing is a set of pre-defined breakpoints which means you’ll have to research and decide which breakpoints work for your purposes). ![]() Using RED you select layout blocks and elements and drag them into place on the canvas then edit, move, and delete them to your heart’s content. RED serves the same purpose as, for example, Bootstrap Studio does for the Bootstrap framework it's a framework editor. RED was based on Curb's Ink (now renamed Foundation for Emails 2), a framework for building responsive email content. RED provides an integrated editing environment that makes constructing and deploying well-designed, rich, responsive email messages much easier even for clients such as Outlook (note that I didn’t write “easy” because, at least for now, this is never truly easy). Good luck.Īfter a friend asked me what he should use for creating newsletters I started looking for a really good email layout tool and after much digging, testing, disappointment, heartache, disillusionment, and angst, I discovered CoffeeCup Software’s Responsive Email Designer for Business.ĬoffeeCup Software’s Responsive Email Designer for Business Sound like too much work? How about using a template? Great, if you can find one that’s sophisticated enough and meets your presentation goals but even then, if you want to modify it, you’re back to going Rambo to, at least, some extent. You could go Rambo on this problem and try to hand code your email taking into account which clients and which versions render what content in what way, and then add tweaks and hacks to deal with all of the edge cases which come up (and come up they do, particularly where mobile is concerned). While the leading email service providers (EMSPs) such as Constant Contact and MailChimp are very good for creating simple email messages that work well across most platforms, when you get ambitious and try to get really clever with sophisticated designs, you'll discover rendering gotchas that can seriously undermine your messaging. The latter really brings home the issues of dealing with the range and complexity of current platforms. ![]() And just to make it all that little bit harder, many mobile platforms have specific version-dependent quirks that break the best-laid plans o' mice and designers.Īllow me to digress for a moment to point you to Campaign Monitor’s article on Responsive email design to give you some background on the issues, as well as a post on the StyleCampaign blog about building a cross-platform seven segment timer display. And you’ve got to take into account not only how email renders on desktop clients (just consider the horrors of Microsoft Outlook’s eccentric rendering of otherwise valid HTML and CSS content) but also what happens to content in various Webmail services and, most importantly these days, on mobile devices. To be competitive these days you have to deliver slick, styled, typographically sophisticated content with color, responsiveness, animation … you name it. Then came HTML mail and the ante was upped but you still didn’t have to break a sweat to ensure that the user could read your content. Many moons ago, you could slap some text into a page along with a few links and that was good enough. If you’ve ever sent bulk email such as newsletters, updates, sales pitches, etc., then you’ll be aware that this isn’t as simple as it used to be. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |