A big email list feels like proof of something. Momentum. Years of work finally paying off. And that number sitting at the top of your Klaviyo dashboard can feel like a badge of honor - especially when you remember all the pop-up forms, giveaways, collaborations, and events that built it.
But what if that number is giving you a completely false picture of how many people actually want to hear from you?
I recently started working with a skincare brand that had built their list to 45,000 subscribers. On paper, that's genuinely impressive. When we got into the account, the real engaged audience was closer to 9,000. The rest was a combination of bots, role accounts, giveaway signups who never had any interest in buying skincare, and contacts that hadn't engaged in years - all sitting there, counted in that number, and costing the brand real money every single month.
This isn't a rare situation. I see versions of it constantly across skincare brands, jewelry brands, apparel brands - really any brand that's been building a list for more than a couple of years without a regular maintenance practice. The number in the dashboard almost never matches the real audience. And the gap between those two things is usually a lot bigger and a lot more expensive than anyone realizes.
In this episode, I break down what actually ends up polluting an email list over time, what it costs you in deliverability and Klaviyo pricing, and how to start thinking about whether your list needs a serious cleanup.
✨ In this episode, you'll learn:
Why a big email list can actually work against you - and what the number in your dashboard isn't telling you
The types of contacts that silently pollute most lists over time (including some that aren't obvious)
Why giveaway and collaboration traffic is so often the source of list bloat
How a dirty list affects your sender reputation and hurts deliverability for everyone - including your best subscribers
The real cost of a bloated list inside Klaviyo's pricing model (and how much brands are overpaying)
Why this client went from 45,000 to 9,000 subscribers - and why their performance actually got better
How to let go of the ego piece and reframe what a smaller, cleaner list actually means
Three things to look at right now to figure out if this problem applies to you
A smaller number you can actually market to is worth infinitely more than a big number that's costing you money and working against you.
Work with Joy Joya: https://joyjoya.com