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What Is Email Marketing? A Beginner’s Starter Guide

Jian Tat Lee
July 13, 2026

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What Is Email Marketing? A Beginner's Starter Guide
TL;DR: Email marketing is using email to reach people who chose to hear from you — sharing offers, updates, and useful content that turn subscribers into customers. Unlike social media, you own your email list, so no algorithm decides who sees your message. Done well, it is the cheapest, highest-return channel in digital marketing, and it keeps paying back as your list grows.

1. Introduction

Most Malaysian business owners pour their energy into social media and ads, then forget the one channel they fully control: email. Every newsletter, receipt, and promo email is a direct line to someone who already raised their hand. That is email marketing, and it quietly outperforms a lot of flashier channels.

The idea is old, but it still works in 2026 because it does something social media cannot. It reaches people you own, not an audience you rent from a platform. For a small business doing marketing with ZenWeb, email is often the first channel we switch on, because it is cheap to start and quick to show results.

This guide explains what email marketing is, how it works, the main types of emails, and whether it is worth it for your business. The short video below from HubSpot gives a quick overview, then we break it down step by step.

HubSpot Tutorial - Email Marketing for Beginners | Create Your First Email Campaign

Source video: HubSpot Marketing on YouTube


2. What is email marketing, in plain English?

Quick Answer: Email marketing is the practice of sending useful or promotional emails to a list of people who agreed to hear from you. The goal is to build a relationship over time, so subscribers get to know, trust, and eventually buy from your business.

The heart of it is the list: a group of people who handed you their email address on purpose. They signed up at your checkout, downloaded a guide, or ticked a box to get your offers. That permission is what makes email different. You are not interrupting strangers; you are talking to people who already showed interest.

Because the list belongs to you, email is an owned channel. No platform sits in the middle deciding who gets to see your message. That control is why email turns casual subscribers into qualified leads so reliably, and why it sits at the core of any serious digital marketing programme.

Key takeaway: Email marketing is talking to people who chose to hear from you. Because you own the list, you control the relationship, not a platform.

3. How does email marketing actually work?

Quick Answer: Email marketing runs on a simple loop: someone gives you permission, you send a relevant message, the email asks for one clear action, then the data comes back to tell you what worked. Repeat that loop and the results compound.

It helps to see email as a cycle rather than a one-off blast. Four things keep that cycle turning:

  • Permission first. Someone subscribes through a form, a checkout, or a lead magnet. No permission, no email.
  • A relevant message. You send something useful or timely, written for that group, not for everyone at once.
  • One clear action. Each email points to a single next step, whether that is to read, click, or buy, which is how a click becomes a conversion.
  • Data back. Opens, clicks, and replies show what landed, so your next email is sharper than the last.

The tools that do the sending are called email service providers. They store your list, help you design emails, send them at scale, and report the results, all from one dashboard.

Key takeaway: Email works as a loop — permission, message, action, data — and each turn of the loop teaches you how to send better.

4. The main types of marketing emails

Quick Answer: Most marketing emails fall into five types: newsletters, promotional emails, welcome and automated emails, transactional emails, and drip campaigns. Each has a different job, and a healthy programme mixes them rather than blasting the same message to everyone.

You do not need every type from day one, but it helps to know what each one is for:

TypeWhat it does
NewsletterRegular updates and tips that keep you front of mind
PromotionalA specific offer, sale, or product push to drive sales
Welcome / automatedTriggered emails that greet or re-engage subscribers on autopilot
TransactionalReceipts, confirmations, and shipping notices people expect
Drip campaignA timed series that nurtures a subscriber toward a decision

The last one is where a lot of the magic happens. A drip campaign sends the right message at the right moment without you lifting a finger, which is why automated emails often earn the most per send.

Key takeaway: Newsletters build trust, promos drive sales, and automated drips do both while you sleep. Use a mix, not one type on repeat.

Not sure where email fits in your plan?

We map email into a full channel strategy for Malaysian SMEs. See our digital marketing services →


5. Which marketing channel gives the best ROI?

Quick Answer: Email consistently returns more per ringgit than any other digital channel. Because sending costs are tiny and the audience already opted in, every RM1 spent on email tends to bring back far more than the same ringgit spent on ads.

This is the single best argument for email. The chart below compares the typical return on each ringgit across common channels.

Estimated return per RM1 spent, by channel
Illustrative return on every ringgit spent, by marketing channel, for a typical Malaysian SME.
ChannelReturn per RM1 
Email marketing~RM38
SEO~RM22
Organic social~RM12
Paid search ads~RM8
Display ads~RM5

Illustrative, based on widely cited channel ROI benchmarks and ZenWeb client patterns, 2024–2026. A guide, not a guarantee.

The gap is not magic; it is maths. You are not paying for every click, and you are sending to people who already want to hear from you. That is why email shapes the marketing ROI of so many small businesses.

Key takeaway: Low cost plus a warm audience makes email the highest-return channel for most SMEs, well ahead of paid ads per ringgit.

6. What does a healthy email campaign look like in Malaysia?

Quick Answer: A healthy email campaign for a Malaysian SME usually sees around 30% of people open it and about 3% click through. The exact numbers vary by industry, but knowing the typical ranges helps you spot when something is working or quietly broken.

Numbers only mean something with a benchmark to compare against. Here is what we tend to see across Malaysian SME campaigns.

Typical email benchmarks for Malaysian SMEs
Typical email marketing benchmarks and healthy targets for Malaysian small and medium businesses.
MetricSME averageHealthy target
Open rate30%35%+
Click-through rate3%4%+
Click-to-open rate11%15%+
Unsubscribe rate0.3%under 0.5%
Bounce rate1%under 2%

Source: ZenWeb operational data, Malaysian SME email campaigns, 2024–2026. A guide, not a guarantee.

The first number to watch is the open rate, since nothing else can happen if the email is never opened. For why subject lines and timing matter so much, see our explainer on email open rate.

Key takeaway: Aim for roughly a 30% open rate and 3% click rate to start, then push higher. Benchmarks turn raw numbers into a clear pass or fail.

7. Email vs social media: why owned beats rented

Quick Answer: With email you own your audience, so your message lands in almost every inbox. On social media you rent the audience, and the platform shows your post to only a small slice of your followers. That difference in reach is why email is the safer long-term bet.

Social media is useful, but you are a tenant there. If the algorithm changes or your account is locked, your reach can vanish overnight. Your email list is yours to keep. The table below shows the practical gap.

Owned vs rented: how much of your audience you actually reach
Comparison of audience ownership and typical reach across email, social media, and search channels.
ChannelDo you own it?Reach of your audience
Your email listYesLands in ~95–99% of inboxes
Organic social postNo~3–5% of followers see it
Paid social / searchNoOnly while you keep paying
SEO / your websitePartlyDepends on your Google ranking

Illustrative, based on common platform reach figures and ZenWeb client patterns, 2024–2026.

This is also why falling organic reach hits so many brands hard. The smart move is to use social media marketing to grow your email list, then use email to actually sell.

Key takeaway: Social media reaches a sliver of your followers; email reaches almost all of your subscribers. Own the audience, then sell to it.

8. How an email list compounds over time

Quick Answer: An email list is an asset that grows in value. As you add subscribers month after month, both your reach and your revenue climb, often faster than the list itself. The early months feel slow, then the returns build on each other.

Email rewards patience, much like SEO does. The illustrative table below shows how revenue can build as a list grows over a first year.

How email revenue compounds as your list grows
Illustrative growth of subscriber count and monthly email revenue over twelve months for a Malaysian SME.
MonthSubscribersMonthly email revenue
Month 1500RM1,200
Month 31,500RM3,800
Month 63,200RM9,000
Month 95,400RM15,500
Month 128,000RM23,000

Illustrative scenario based on ZenWeb client patterns, 2024–2026. A guide, not a guarantee.

Each subscriber adds lasting value, the same way each backlink strengthens your rankings over time. That compounding is why email pairs so well with SEO as a long-term growth engine.

Key takeaway: A list is an asset, not a one-off campaign. Keep adding subscribers and the revenue compounds month after month.

Ready to build a list that pays you back?

We set up the forms, automations, and emails for you. Explore our digital marketing services →


9. Email marketing and the law in Malaysia

Quick Answer: In Malaysia, you should only email people who gave clear permission, and every email needs an easy way to unsubscribe. The Personal Data Protection Act 2010 governs how you collect and store personal data, so consent and good record-keeping are not optional extras.

Good email marketing and good compliance point the same way: respect the inbox. A few habits keep you safe and keep your list healthy:

  • Get real consent. Let people opt in knowingly. Never buy a list or add people who never asked to hear from you.
  • Make leaving easy. A clear unsubscribe link in every email is both the law’s expectation and a trust signal.
  • Keep data safe. Store subscriber details securely and only use them for what people agreed to.

Treating consent properly is simply part of running a trustworthy digital marketing strategy. A permission-based list also performs better, because the people on it actually want your emails.

Key takeaway: Permission, an easy unsubscribe, and safe data handling keep you on the right side of the PDPA and earn you a list that converts.

10. How to start email marketing

Quick Answer: To start, pick a beginner-friendly email platform, build your list with permission, set up a welcome email, group subscribers into segments, then send, measure, and improve. You can launch your first campaign in an afternoon, often for free.

You do not need a big budget or a marketing team. Five steps get you running:

  1. Pick an email platform. Choose a tool with a free starter tier, a drag-and-drop editor, and simple automation.
  2. Build your list the right way. Add a signup form to your website and store contacts in a CRM so consent is tracked.
  3. Set up a welcome email. Automate one friendly email the moment someone subscribes, so the relationship starts warm.
  4. Segment your subscribers. Group people by interest or past behaviour so each email feels relevant, not generic.
  5. Send, measure, improve. Send a useful email, check your open and click rates, then sharpen the next one.

If this sits alongside other channels you are still learning, our digital marketing guide for beginners in Malaysia shows how email fits the bigger picture.

Key takeaway: Platform, permission-based list, welcome email, segments, then a send-measure-improve loop. Start small and let the data guide you.

11. Is email marketing worth it for your business?

Quick Answer: Email marketing is worth it for almost any business with repeat customers or a sales cycle longer than one visit. If people buy from you more than once, or take time to decide, email is one of the cheapest ways to stay in front of them until they are ready.

Run a quick self-check before you commit:

  • Do customers buy more than once? Repeat buyers make a list valuable fast, since each email can drive another sale.
  • Is your sales cycle slow? If people compare and think before buying, email keeps you in the running.
  • Can you collect emails? A website, a shopfront, or a checkout all give you natural moments to ask for a signup.

If you said yes to any of those, email earns its place. For most Malaysian SMEs it is the highest-value channel they can add, and it strengthens every other part of their digital marketing mix.

Key takeaway: If customers repeat or take time to decide, email is almost always worth it. It is cheap to run and lifts the rest of your marketing.

12. Conclusion

Email marketing is simply using email to build a relationship with people who chose to hear from you, then turning that relationship into sales. It runs on a clear loop of permission, a relevant message, one action, and the data that comes back, and it spans newsletters, promos, automated welcomes, and drip campaigns.

What sets it apart is ownership. You hold the list, so no algorithm decides your reach, and the asset compounds as it grows. For a Malaysian SME weighing where to spend limited time and budget, email is one of the easiest channels to start and one of the most rewarding to keep. Now you know what email marketing is, how it works, and how to begin.


13. Frequently Asked Questions

1. What is email marketing in simple terms?

Email marketing is sending useful or promotional emails to people who signed up to hear from your business, so you can build trust and turn subscribers into customers over time. Because you own the list, no algorithm limits who sees your message, which makes it one of the most reliable channels in digital marketing.

2. Is email marketing still effective in 2026?

Yes. Email keeps delivering one of the highest returns of any channel because it reaches an audience you own, not one you rent from a platform. As inboxes get busier, relevance matters more than ever, but a well-segmented, permission-based list still converts better than most paid ads.

3. How much does it cost to start email marketing?

You can start for free. Most email platforms offer a free tier for small lists, so your main early cost is time, not money. As your list grows past a few thousand subscribers, expect a modest monthly fee based on list size or how many emails you send.

4. How often should I send marketing emails?

For most Malaysian SMEs, once a week to twice a month works well. The right pace depends on how much useful content you have and how your subscribers respond. Watch your open and unsubscribe rates: if opens fall and unsubscribes rise, you are sending too often or drifting off-topic.

5. Do I need permission to email people in Malaysia?

Yes. Under Malaysia’s Personal Data Protection Act 2010, you should collect email addresses with clear consent and give people an easy way to unsubscribe. Buying lists or emailing people who never opted in hurts your sender reputation and your brand, so always grow your list with permission.

Ready to turn subscribers into customers?

Book a free 30-minute strategy session. We will review your website, your current email setup, and your audience, then give you a concrete 90-day plan to build a list that sells, with realistic growth and revenue targets.

Get my free strategy session →

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