Opt-in is the process by which someone explicitly agrees to receive email communications from your organization. It is the foundation of permission-based email marketing and a legal requirement in most jurisdictions. There are two types: single opt-in (subscriber signs up and is immediately added) and double opt-in (subscriber must confirm via email before being added).
Opt-in is both a legal requirement and a best practice for email marketing. Laws like GDPR, CAN-SPAM, and CASL require explicit consent before sending commercial emails. Beyond compliance, opt-in builds a higher-quality subscriber base. People who actively choose to receive your emails are more likely to engage, less likely to complain about spam, and more likely to convert. Sending to people who did not opt in damages your reputation, generates complaints, and can result in legal penalties. Double opt-in specifically protects against fake signups, typos, and malicious subscriptions.
In single opt-in, a person submits their email address through a signup form and is immediately added to your mailing list. They typically receive a welcome email but no confirmation is required. In double opt-in (also called confirmed opt-in), after submitting their email, the person receives a confirmation email with a link they must click to verify their address and confirm their subscription. Only after clicking this link are they added to your active list. Double opt-in provides proof of consent and ensures the address is valid and controlled by the person who signed up.
Double opt-in is not explicitly required by most laws, but it provides the strongest proof of consent. GDPR requires demonstrable consent, which double opt-in provides. In Germany, double opt-in is effectively required by case law. Even where not legally required, double opt-in is recommended for list quality and deliverability.
Yes, double opt-in typically reduces list growth by 20-40% compared to single opt-in because some people do not complete the confirmation step. However, the subscribers you do get are higher quality, with better engagement rates and fewer complaints. The net result is often better email marketing performance despite smaller lists.
Store: the email address, timestamp of opt-in, source/form where they signed up, IP address, what they consented to receive, and for double opt-in, the confirmation timestamp and IP. These records protect you in case of complaints or legal challenges. Most ESPs store this data automatically.
Generally no. Adding people without consent violates laws like GDPR and CAN-SPAM, damages your sender reputation, and generates spam complaints. Exceptions vary by jurisdiction but typically cover existing customer relationships. When in doubt, get explicit permission before sending email.
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