Email marketing metrics that matter: Beyond open rate
Open rate is broken. Apple Mail Privacy Protection distorts more than 55% of all recorded opens. Learn the three-tier email ...







Open rate used to be the headline number in every email report. Subject line test? Measure open rate. New send time? Check open rate. New segment? Open rate tells you if it worked. That logic stopped being reliable in 2021 when Apple launched Mail Privacy Protection, and the situation has only gotten harder to ignore.
This article explains why open rate fails as a performance metric, what to track instead, and how to build a measurement framework that connects your email program to revenue. You will leave with specific benchmarks, formulas, and a clear tier structure for reporting email performance to the people who make decisions.
Open rate was never a perfect metric, but it used to be directionally useful. That changed in September 2021 when Apple launched Mail Privacy Protection (MPP), which automatically pre-fetches email content on Apple's proxy servers and triggers the tracking pixel before the recipient ever opens the message. As of early 2024, MPP accounts for roughly 55 percent of all email opens, according to Litmus. The majority of your open data does not reflect a real human action.
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MPP was built to protect user privacy, and it does that well. For email marketers, it creates a measurement problem that does not announce itself clearly. Open rates climb. Dashboard numbers look healthy. Revenue stays flat.
The second source of distortion is bot activity. Corporate email security tools, particularly those used in B2B environments, often pre-load email content to scan for threats. This inflates both opens and, in some cases, click data, especially for B2B lists routed through systems like Microsoft Defender or Proofpoint.
Chad S. White, Group VP of CRM Strategy at Zeta Global and author of Email Marketing Rules, is direct about it: "Open rates are health metrics, not success metrics. A sudden ten-point drop means you've got a deliverability problem. Beyond that, they can't tell you much anymore."
Litmus data from their State of Email Innovations survey shows 40 percent of email marketers still use open rate as their primary success metric. That is the core problem this article addresses.

Open rate has not become worthless. It has a narrow, specific job.
That is where the use case ends. Open rate should not appear in a performance report next to revenue, pipeline, or lead numbers.
Several ESPs now allow you to filter MPP-generated opens from your reporting. Klaviyo and Brevo both offer this toggle. If you use click-to-open rate (CTOR) as a metric, turn on MPP exclusion before you calculate it. CTOR uses open count as its denominator. Inflated opens deflate your CTOR and make content look less effective than it is.
A useful email measurement framework organizes metrics into three tiers: list health, engagement, and revenue attribution. Each tier answers a different question. List health tells you whether your program can function. Engagement tells you whether your content connects. Revenue attribution tells you whether email is driving outcomes the business cares about.
Most email programs track one tier at best. High-performing programs track all three and review them on different cadences.
"When we switch clients from open rate reporting to CTOR and revenue per email, the first thing they notice is how much cleaner the conversation with leadership becomes. There is no longer a number that looks good but explains nothing." Brittany Charles, SVP, Client Services

List health metrics tell you the quality and deliverability potential of your subscriber base. They are not headline numbers, but they are the foundation everything else depends on.
Key metrics in this tier:
Engagement metrics tell you how your content performs once emails land in the inbox.
Key metrics in this tier:
Revenue attribution metrics connect email activity to business outcomes. These are the numbers that belong in executive reports.
Key metrics in this tier:

CTR and CTOR are the two most actionable engagement metrics available now that open rate has lost reliability. CTR tells you whether your email drove action across your full list. CTOR tells you whether the content was compelling to the people who saw it. Both measure real behavior. Neither is inflated by pre-fetching or bot activity.
CTR benchmarks vary significantly by industry and email type. Klaviyo's 2026 email marketing benchmarks, drawn from over 183,000 brands, show automated flows delivering a 5.58 percent click rate versus 1.69 percent for broadcast campaigns. That is more than a 3x gap.
If your broadcast CTR consistently falls below 1 percent and your flows hover at 3 percent or above, the gap usually traces back to one of three causes:
A useful diagnostic: calculate CTR by segment rather than by full campaign. If engaged subscribers click at 4 percent and your full list averages 1.5 percent, the issue is not your content. It is list hygiene.
CTOR isolates content quality from subject line quality. A high open rate paired with a low CTOR means your subject line created interest that your email body did not deliver on. A low open rate with a high CTOR means your content is strong but your subject lines are underperforming.
Use CTOR to:
The MailerLite 2025 benchmark report, covering over 3.6 million campaigns, puts the average CTOR at 6.81 percent across all industries. Manufacturing, legal, and media categories typically sit well above that. Insurance, beauty, and political emails track significantly below.

Revenue per email (RPE) is the clearest bridge between your email program and the outcomes your leadership team reports on. It does not require explaining click anomalies or subject line results. It answers one question: how much revenue did each email generate? For revenue-focused teams, RPE belongs at the top of the reporting stack.
The formula is simple. Divide total revenue attributed to an email by the number of delivered sends. If a campaign generates $12,000 in revenue from 60,000 delivered emails, your RPE is $0.20.
That number becomes actionable when you:
Klaviyo's benchmark data shows that automated flows generate revenue per recipient nearly 18 times higher than broadcast campaigns. Automated emails also drive 37 percent of all email-generated sales despite making up only 2 percent of total email volume, per Litmus research cited by InboxAlly. That ratio should shift how teams allocate time between campaign creation and flow optimization.
A rising RPE over time, while holding CTR stable or improving, signals that:
A falling RPE alongside a rising CTR typically signals that clicks are not converting. That is a landing page or offer problem rather than an email problem, and it shows exactly where the fix needs to happen.
Delivery rate measures whether your email was accepted by the receiving server. Inbox placement rate measures whether it actually landed where the recipient will see it. These two numbers can diverge significantly, and most ESPs report only the former. A 98 percent delivery rate alongside a 60 percent inbox placement rate means 38 percent of your delivered emails went directly to spam.
Roughly one in six marketing emails never reaches the inbox, per Validity's 2024 Email Deliverability Benchmark. That represents significant lost revenue before any engagement begins.
Inbox placement is determined primarily by sender reputation, which inbox providers like Gmail and Yahoo calculate using:
The practical path to protecting inbox placement follows four steps:
A large email list is only valuable if it is also an engaged and clean one. In 2024, the average email list lost roughly 16 percent of its subscribers through unsubscribes and bounces combined, while growing at only 4 percent. That is a net decline. Tracking list health metrics separately from engagement metrics is the only way to see this problem before it erodes your sending infrastructure.
List health problems compound quietly. A list with 20 percent inactive contacts does not just reduce engagement rates. It drags down sender reputation, reduces inbox placement, and inflates the cost of every send. Removing those contacts improves every downstream metric.
Broadcast campaigns and automated flows should not be measured against the same benchmarks. They serve different purposes, reach audiences at different moments, and produce dramatically different results. Treating them as a single category obscures where your email program is actually creating value.
Klaviyo's 2026 benchmark data across 183,000 brands makes the gap concrete. Automated flows deliver click rates of 5.58 percent compared to 1.69 percent for campaigns. Flows produce placed order rates 13 times higher than campaigns. And flows generate 41 percent of total email revenue from just 5.3 percent of all sends.
That is a fundamental distinction in how these two email types operate, and it demands a separate measurement structure for each.
"The moment you separate campaign data from flow data in your reporting, patterns you were missing start surfacing immediately. Flow performance tells a completely different story from campaigns, and conflating them means you are optimizing for the wrong thing." Derick Do, Co-Founder and Chief Product Officer
Broadcast campaigns go to a defined segment at a scheduled time. The right metrics for campaigns are:
Automated flows run continuously and trigger based on subscriber behavior. The right metrics for flows are:
The Litmus State of Email Reports for 2025-2026 notes that the top 8 percent of email programs, those generating 45:1 ROI or higher, most commonly send newsletters and onboarding sequences, not promotional blasts. Relationship-building email types, measured properly through flow-level metrics, consistently outperform volume-driven campaign strategies.

AI is changing what is worth measuring in email. Personalization tools now produce measurable performance differences that show up in standard metrics. AI product recommendations lift average email click rates to 3.75 percent, and to 8.79 percent for top-performing brands, per Klaviyo's 2026 benchmarks. Those numbers justify tracking AI-driven sends as a distinct measurement category.
Segmented campaigns already show what targeted relevance can do. Segmented sends produce 28 percent higher click rates and 14 percent higher open rates compared to unsegmented sends. Advanced personalization, when fully implemented, has been linked to revenue increases of up to 760 percent across multiple industry studies.
When AI drives the send logic, your measurement approach needs to adjust:
A handful of advanced signals are beginning to appear in high-performing programs and will become standard measurement practice over the next two years:
Email metrics only create value when they drive decisions. The most common failure in email measurement is a reporting structure that looks organized in a dashboard and means nothing to the people reviewing it.
Here is a practical approach to building a measurement stack that holds up in practice:
At Launchcodex, separating campaign and flow reporting is one of the first structural decisions we make when building email infrastructure for clients. That single decision makes every performance conversation afterward cleaner and more useful.
Email marketing generates between $36 and $42 for every dollar spent across multiple industry benchmarks. Capturing that return consistently requires building measurement on data that reflects real behavior. If you want help building email infrastructure or attribution reporting that connects to your growth goals, our email marketing services cover the full stack from sending infrastructure to performance reporting.
Not completely, but its use case is narrow. Open rate works as a deliverability health signal. A sudden drop of 10 or more percentage points across a large send usually indicates an inbox placement or sender reputation problem. It should not be used as a primary engagement or performance metric.
The industry average across all sectors was 6.81 percent in 2025 per MailerLite's benchmark data. CTOR varies significantly by industry and email type. Transactional emails and automated flows typically outperform broadcast campaigns. Use your own historical baseline as the primary reference before comparing to industry averages.
Divide total revenue attributed to an email by the number of emails delivered. If a campaign generates $5,000 from 25,000 delivered emails, your revenue per email is $0.20. Track this per campaign and per flow separately to see where your program creates the most financial value per send.
Inbox placement rate measures the percentage of delivered emails that land in the primary inbox rather than spam or promotions. Your ESP delivery rate does not show this. Use a dedicated inbox placement testing tool such as Validity, GlockApps, or MailReach to test placement before major sends.
Flows reach subscribers at high-intent moments tied to their own behavior, such as after signup, after cart abandonment, or after a purchase. That behavioral relevance produces higher click and conversion rates than scheduled broadcasts. Klaviyo's 2026 benchmark data shows flows generating revenue per recipient nearly 18 times higher than campaigns from just 5.3 percent of total send volume.
Keep spam complaint rates below 0.3 percent to comply with Gmail and Yahoo's 2024 bulk sender requirements. Rates above 0.1 percent are worth investigating for relevance, frequency, or list acquisition issues before they trigger deliverability action.



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