Email Marketing Proposal Template for Agencies
Propose email marketing services with this template. Covers strategy, automation, deliverables, and pricing.
Email marketing is one of the most profitable services agencies offer—ROI averages 42:1 according to DMA research—yet many agencies lose deals because their email marketing proposal template is either generic or missing critical sections. If your proposals don't address specific campaign types, automation flows, and clear KPIs, clients won't understand what they're paying for. This post walks you through a complete email marketing proposal template that wins deals and sets realistic expectations from day one.
What Makes an Email Marketing Proposal Stand Out
Before we build the template, understand why most email marketing proposals fail. They treat email as a single channel ("we'll send newsletters") instead of a multi-layered system with welcome sequences, nurture tracks, promotional campaigns, and re-engagement flows. They skip deliverability, testing strategy, and growth tactics entirely. And they rarely show the actual *work*—the templates, flows, sequences—that clients will receive.
The best proposals are transparent about what happens every month and specific about what success looks like. That's what separates a $500/month commoditized email service from a $3,000+ retainer.
Section 1: Current State Assessment
Start your email marketing proposal by diagnosing where the client stands now. This section builds trust and justifies your recommendations later.
What to Ask and Document
1. Current email list size — How many active subscribers do they have today? This tells you how much upside exists for list growth and how much testing capacity you have.
2. Email sending frequency — Are they sending weekly? Monthly? Never? High frequency signals either strong engagement habits or poor segmentation.
3. Current open and click rates — Grab 3-6 months of email data from their existing ESP (or if they have none, note that baseline metrics don't exist yet). Average open rates by industry range from 15-25%; if they're sending at 8%, that's a red flag they need strategy work, not just execution.
4. List growth rate — Is their subscriber count growing, flat, or declining? If declining by 20% annually due to churn, you need to prioritize list-building and re-engagement campaigns.
5. Current segmentation — Are they sending the same message to everyone, or do they segment by purchase history, engagement level, or customer type? If it's undifferentiated, segmentation becomes a quick win you can highlight.
6. Tools in use — Mailchimp, Klaviyo, ConvertKit, or custom integration? Tool stack affects what automation flows are possible and at what cost.
Example Current State Assessment table:| Metric | Current | Industry Benchmark | Gap |
|--------|---------|-------------------|-----|
| Active subscribers | 8,500 | 15,000 (target) | -6,500 |
| Monthly open rate | 12% | 18% | -6pp |
| List growth rate | -8% annually | +15% annually | -23pp |
| Welcome sequence | None | Standard | Need to build |
This diagnostic work positions you as a problem-solver, not a vendor. You're not just offering email services; you're fixing specific issues.
Section 2: Email Strategy & List Architecture
This is the section where most commodity proposals fall apart. Describe *exactly* what types of campaigns you'll run and why.
The Five Core Campaign Types
Your proposal should break down the exact campaigns you'll build and maintain:
1. Welcome Series (auto-triggered)- Send this when someone subscribes. Warm up new subscribers before selling.
- Typically 3-5 emails over 7-10 days.
- Example structure: Email 1 (immediate) = confirm + intro offer; Email 2 (day 2) = brand story + most popular product; Email 3 (day 5) = social proof + discount; Email 4 (day 7) = abandoned cart recovery or FAQ.
- Expected impact: Lifts first-purchase conversion by 20-40% vs. no sequence.
- Keeps engaged subscribers warm between promotions.
- Typically 2-4 emails per week mixing education, soft sells, and community building.
- Example for a SaaS: tips on using the product, customer success stories, industry news, webinar invites.
- Expected impact: Reduces unsubscribe rate, increases customer lifetime value, keeps you top-of-mind.
- Holiday sales, flash sales, product launches, seasonal offers.
- Include both scheduled broadcasts and abandoned-cart/browse-recovery flows.
- Example: Send a "Black Friday is live" email to all active subscribers, then a "you left items in your cart" follow-up 24 hours later to those who clicked but didn't buy.
- Expected impact: 35-50% of revenue typically comes from 3-4 major promotional campaigns annually.
- Target inactive subscribers (no opens in 90+ days) before removing them.
- Offer a reason to stay or an easy exit.
- Example: "We've missed you—here are the 5 most popular posts from last quarter" + a "update your preferences" link.
- Expected impact: Recovers 5-15% of inactive subscribers; prevents delivery reputation damage from unopened mail.
- Order confirmations, shipping notifications, account updates.
- These aren't "marketing" but heavily influence customer experience and repeat purchase rates.
- Example: A post-purchase flow for an e-commerce client: order confirmation → shipped notification → delivered → review request → cross-sell for related products.
- Expected impact: Increases repeat purchase rate by 25-35%.
In your proposal, show a calendar sample or a visual flow diagram for each campaign type. Clients don't understand automation; they understand timeline. Show them:
"Over the next 90 days, we'll build a welcome series that sends 4 emails to every new subscriber, a twice-weekly nurture flow with evergreen content, and a promotional campaign tied to your biggest sales event."
Why fill in brackets manually?
Wintura generates this template automatically — filled in with your client's real details, your pricing, and your brand. 5 minutes, not 5 hours.
Generate With AI InsteadSection 3: List Growth & Audience Development
Email revenue scales with list size. A proposal that ignores list growth is a proposal that ignores your client's future margins.
Specific Growth Tactics to Include
1. Website signup optimization — Add 2-3 new opt-in forms (pop-up on exit intent, sticky bar, lead magnet page). Test copy variations. Expected lift: 15-40% more subscribers monthly depending on current traffic.
2. Lead magnet creation — Build a resource (checklist, guide, template, tool) that incentivizes signup. Include it in lead magnet-specific emails and on relevant blog posts. Example: if the client sells project management software, the lead magnet could be "Project Timeline Template + Gantt Chart Guide."
3. Blog-to-email integration — Every blog post includes a contextual CTA for a related lead magnet. This converts 2-5% of blog readers into subscribers.
4. Customer referral loop — Ask existing customers to refer friends in exchange for a discount or bonus content. Expected: 10-20% of new subscribers from referrals.
5. Social-to-email — Run social ads or organic posts offering a free resource in exchange for email signup.
Real example from a fitness brand we know:- Started with 12,000 subscribers, flat growth.
- Added 3 new opt-in forms + a downloadable "30-day nutrition guide" lead magnet.
- Created 4 blog posts optimized for each lead magnet + social promotion.
- In 6 months: grew to 18,500 subscribers (54% growth). That's 270+ new qualified leads monthly—a direct revenue multiplier.
In your proposal, set a specific growth target: "Based on your current traffic and conversion rate, we'll target 300-400 new subscribers per month, growing your list to 15,000+ by month 12."
Section 4: Email Template Design & Deliverability
This is where many proposals get vague. Be specific about what you'll build.
Template Design Scope
Specify the *number* of templates you'll create:
- 1-2 welcome series templates (mobile-responsive, branded)
- 4-6 nurture/promotional templates (varied layouts for articles, product spotlights, listicles)
- 1-2 re-engagement templates
- Custom template for any major campaigns (holiday, product launch)
State the design platform: "Built in Figma and coded by hand for optimal deliverability" or "Built in your ESP's native builder for easy in-house updates." Coding by hand wins higher client credibility; using the ESP's builder is faster and more cost-effective.
Deliverability Non-Negotiables
Many agencies ignore this—and watch client emails hit spam. Your proposal must address:
1. SPF/DKIM/DMARC authentication — You'll set these up so emails appear as coming from the client's domain, not from the ESP.
2. List hygiene — Remove hard bounces after each send, suppress hard bounces going forward, remove spam complaints immediately. Expected: maintain 98%+ deliverability rate.
3. ISP feedback loops — Monitor complaints and adjust sending practices if needed.
4. Warm-up for new domains — If the client's email domain is new, send at low volume initially and ramp up over 2-3 weeks to avoid spam folder placement.
5. Sending cadence — Too frequent = unsubscribes and complaints; too infrequent = list decay. Your proposal should state the planned frequency: "2x weekly nurture emails + 2-3 promotional sends per month."
Example language for your proposal:
"We'll ensure all emails authenticate under your domain and maintain a 98%+ delivery rate by removing hard bounces, monitoring spam complaints, and following ISP guidelines. If your domain is new to email marketing, we'll use a warm-up protocol to establish reputation over 3 weeks."
Section 5: A/B Testing & Optimization Plan
This separates strategic email work from set-it-and-forget-it services.
Testing Roadmap to Include in Your Proposal
1. Subject line testing (Month 1-2) — Test 2 variations on 30-50% of the audience, send winning variant to remaining 50-70%. Test patterns: question vs. statement, personalization, emoji usage, curiosity gap.
2. Send time testing (Month 1-3) — Test 9am, 12pm, 3pm, 6pm sends on different segments to find peak engagement time for this specific audience. Expected lift: 5-15% on click rates.
3. CTA button color & copy (Month 2-4) — Test button position (top vs. bottom of email), color (brand color vs. contrasting), and copy ("Learn More" vs. "Get My Free Guide"). Expected lift: 3-10%.
4. Email length & format (Month 3+) — Test short (100 words) vs. medium (300 words) vs. long-form (1000+ words) emails to see what your audience prefers.
5. Segment-level testing — Some segments convert better with different messaging. A nurture email for "high-value customers" might include premium content; one for "trial users" might include onboarding help.
Create a simple testing calendar in your proposal:| Month | Test | Winning Metric |
|-------|------|-----------------|
| Month 1 | Subject line A/B | Open rate +8% |
| Month 2 | Send time testing | Click rate +10% |
| Month 3 | CTA design variants | Conversion +5% |
| Month 4 | Long-form vs. short email | Engagement consistency |
Over 12 months of consistent testing, expect a 25-40% improvement in overall click and conversion rates. That compounds directly to revenue.
Section 6: Automation Flows & Monthly Deliverables
Clients need to know what *work* they're getting each month. Be granular.
Automation Flows You'll Build
- Welcome sequence (4-5 emails triggered on signup)
- Abandoned cart recovery (2-3 emails, triggered on cart abandonment)
- Post-purchase flow (3-5 emails to new customers over 30 days)
- Re-engagement campaign (quarterly, triggered on 90-day inactivity)
- Win-back campaign (annual, to lapsed customers)
- Nurture sequences (segmented by customer type or behavior)
Monthly Deliverables Checklist
1. Campaign sends — # of promotional/broadcast campaigns per month (e.g., "4 promotional campaigns + 8 nurture sends")
2. List maintenance — Remove bounces, manage unsubscribes, segment updates
3. Performance reporting — Monthly dashboard showing open rate, click rate, conversions, revenue attributed to email
4. A/B testing — One test executed monthly with results documented
5. Content calendar — Proposed topics and send dates for the next 30 days
6. Strategy adjustments — Quarterly reviews to optimize based on performance data
7. Template updates — Design adjustments, refreshes, or new templates as needed
Example monthly scope statement:
"Each month, you'll receive 6 promotional emails, 8 nurture emails, list maintenance and deliverability monitoring, one A/B test, a full performance report, and a content strategy update call."
Section 7: KPIs & Success Metrics
Define what success looks like in concrete terms. Too many agencies skip this and get blamed for poor results they never promised.
Email-Specific KPIs to Track
| KPI | Current | 3-Month Target | 12-Month Target |
|-----|---------|----------------|-----------------|
| Open rate | 12% | 16% | 20%+ |
| Click rate | 1.2% | 2.0% | 2.5%+ |
| Unsubscribe rate | 0.5% | <0.3% | <0.3% |
| Conversion rate (from email) | 1.8% | 2.5% | 3.2%+ |
| List growth rate | -8% | +5% | +12%+ |
| Email revenue per subscriber | $0.45 | $0.60 | $0.85+ |
| Revenue from email | $3,800/mo | $5,600/mo | $12,000+/mo |
This last metric—email revenue—is what clients care about most. Calculate it: (email revenue) / (list size) = revenue per subscriber. Show how list growth + engagement improvements multiply revenue.
Section 8: Monthly Retainer Investment
Price it correctly. Email service ranges wildly:
- DIY / template agencies: $500-$1,200/month (basic setup, light content)
- Full-service strategic email: $2,000-$5,000+/month (custom flows, testing, growth, strategy)
- High-volume e-commerce email: $5,000-$15,000+/month (complex segmentation, multiple campaigns, revenue attribution)
Your retainer should include:
1. Campaign management — Writing copy, designing, scheduling, monitoring
2. Automation setup & maintenance — Building/updating flows, list hygiene
3. Strategy & optimization — Testing, A/B testing, quarterly strategy calls
4. Reporting — Monthly dashboard, insights, recommendations
5. Template design & coding — Custom templates or template updates
6. List growth strategy — New opt-in forms, lead magnet promotion, growth tactics
Example retainer structure:- Base: $3,000/month (campaigns, automation, reporting)
- +$800 for custom template design
- +$400 for list growth services (form optimization, lead magnet creation)
- Total: $4,200/month
For a client generating $300,000+ annually from email, this is a 5-10% cost of that revenue channel—easily justified.
For related pricing context, see our guide on how to price email marketing services.
Section 9: Timeline & Implementation Roadmap
Vague timelines lose deals. Be specific.
Sample 12-Month Roadmap
Month 1: Foundation- Audit current email program
- Set up domain authentication (SPF/DKIM/DMARC)
- Design 4-6 core templates
- Build welcome series (4 emails)
- Create content calendar
- Begin A/B testing program
- Launch nurture sequences
- Build abandoned cart flow
- Execute first 2 A/B tests
- Begin list growth campaigns (new opt-in forms, lead magnet)
- First performance report
- Implement testing learnings
- Add re-engagement campaign
- Segment audience by engagement level
- Execute quarterly strategy review
Why fill in brackets manually?
Wintura generates this template automatically — filled in with your client's real details, your pricing, and your brand. 5 minutes, not 5 hours.
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