Florists: How to Get More People to Open Your Emails

Let's start with a simple truth - if someone's joined your email list, it's because they want to hear from you. They've actively handed over their email address and said, yes, you can pop up in my inbox.

That's a pretty big deal. And it makes them one of your warmest, most engaged audiences.

But inboxes are busy places, especially during peak periods, and no-one wants the email they've lovingly written sitting unopened between a Vinted notification and 20% off a pair of shoes they definitely don't need.

Your job is to stand out, grab attention and give your audience something that feels genuinely worth their click.

And it all starts with one thing: the open.

Because before you can wow them with your words or win them over with your offer, they have to open the email first.

Here's how to give them a reason to.

1. Start with a plan (before you write a word)

Anyone who knows us knows we love a plan. Why? Because it gives you the head space to really think about the goal of your email and how to put your customer first.

Ask yourself:

  • What problem or need does this product/service solve for my customer?

  • What feeling does it give them?

  • Why does this matter to their everyday life - today?

When you start with their needs, not your news, everything changes. You’ll start to write valuable content your subscribers actually want to read.

It’s not: “We’ve launched a new product.”
It’s: “This will make your week better.”

2. Subject lines are everything

You could write the most perfect, heart-melting, conversion-boosting email in the world, but if the subject line doesn't make them click to open it, none of it matters.

Subject lines are like hooks. Their job is to grab attention and give people a reason to open. Think curiosity, relevance, urgency, and a bit of personality.

Some florist-friendly subject lines we love:

· You forgot something…
· This is what your week needs
· Last chance for weekend blooms
· These <insert flowers>? You can't have them.

And if coming up with subject lines is the bit that leaves you staring at a blinking cursor, we've done some of the thinking for you. Our Seed to Send email marketing mini course includes 50 subject line ideas for florists, ready to pinch, tweak and make your own.

3. Preview text: your secret weapon

That little line under the subject line? That’s preview text, and it often gets overlooked.

But it’s powerful.

Use it to:

  • Complete the story your subject line starts

  • Spark intrigue

  • Add a second hook

  • Or create contrast and surprise

Example:
Subject line: “You forgot something…”
Preview text: “(And you’ll notice it when you get home)”

The two together should feel like a double act: clever, compelling, and made to be clicked.

4. Make it feel personal

People are more likely to open emails that feel like they were written just for them.

The more targeted and relevant your message is, the more it stands out in a crowded inbox.

So write like you’re talking to one person—your ideal customer. The one you wish you could clone given half the chance.

You could even try adding a personalisation tag to the subject line, like:
“[First Name], we’ve picked these just for you…”

When it sounds personal, it feels worth opening.

5. Think about the sender name

Before they even read your subject line, the first thing someone sees is who the email is from.

If it’s a generic, unfamiliar or unapproachable name, like info@something.com or noreply@something.com - your beautifully crafted subject line might never stand a chance.

Use a name your customers will recognise and trust.
“Helen at Queen Bee” feels human, warm, and familiar for example.

It’s a small change that can make a big difference to your open rate.

6. Timing & consistency matter more than you think

There's no magic day or hour for sending emails. The "best time" is when your audience gets used to hearing from you and opens because they know you're worth reading.

That's where consistency comes in.

Whether it's once a week or once a month, regularity builds trust. You stay top of mind. You earn your place in their inbox.

And it's worth remembering that not everyone on your list will stay engaged forever. Subscribers go quiet. Life gets busy. Your emails slip down their inbox. It happens.

But an inactive subscriber doesn't necessarily mean a lost subscriber. Sometimes they just need a reason to notice you again.

Inside Branching Out, our next-step email marketing mini course for florists, we show you how to identify inactive subscribers and build a re-engagement campaign designed to wake them back up.

How to Write Emails Your Customers Want to Open

Email isn't about cold selling. It's about keeping in touch with people who already love what you do. So focus on being useful. Share a tip, answer a question, or offer something they didn't know they needed. When your email genuinely helps or delights your customer, it stops feeling like marketing and starts feeling like a no-brainer to open.

And if you're reading this thinking, yes, lovely… but I still haven't actually sent an email

Seed to Send takes you from setting up Flodesk to designing and sending your first email, step by step. And if you've already mastered the basics, Branching Out will help you use features like workflows, segmentation and re-engagement campaigns to make your email marketing work even harder.

Two practical email marketing mini courses. Created specifically for florists.

Helen Burton