There's a lawsuit in the news right now involving a major retailer and their email marketing. I'm not going to weigh in on the legal debate - but it did make me want to talk about something I think gets overlooked when email programs are moving fast.
Email is permission-based marketing. Someone gave you their address and said yes, you can communicate with me. That's not a small thing. And it comes with a responsibility that's easy to lose sight of when you're optimizing for clicks and conversions in the moment.
Urgency isn't the problem. A sale that genuinely ends, an item that's almost gone, a seasonal moment that isn't coming back - that's real urgency, and communicating it clearly is good marketing. The problem is when urgency became so effective, and email became such a volume game, that it started getting used as a default. Not because there was something real to communicate, but because it moves people.
And somewhere along the way, the subject line stopped reflecting reality - and started creating it.
Most brands, when they audit their own emails honestly, find more manufactured urgency than they realized. And the cost isn't just legal. It's the slow erosion of the trust your whole email program runs on.
In this episode, I break down the difference between urgency that's earned and urgency that's manufactured, why it matters more than most brands realize, and two practical things you can do right now to start thinking about your email program as a trust-building tool - not just a revenue lever.
✨ In this episode, you'll learn:
What the Ulta lawsuit is actually about - and why it's worth paying attention to even if you're a small brand
Why manufactured urgency became so common in email marketing (and why that doesn't make it okay)
The difference between urgency that's earned vs. urgency that just borrows against your audience's trust
How to think about every email you send as either a deposit or a withdrawal in your subscriber relationship
Why the trust problem isn't new - even if the legal risk is
How a promotional calendar stacked with rolling, overlapping sales is quietly training your audience not to respond
Two practical steps to audit your own urgency habits and start building a more sustainable email program
When your subscribers learn that your deadlines are real, you don't have to manufacture the pressure. The pressure's already there - because you've built a track record of meaning what you say.
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