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Welcome to do this, not that, the podcast for marketers. We share quick tips, things you can do right now, and then we add a little bit of chaos at the end of every episode. We also keep it short like this intro. Let's check it out. We are back for what's up this week from the do this not that podcast. And there is some like earth shattering stuff going on in the world of email. If your company sends out any email of any kind, business, consumer, doesn't matter. And I really want to break down if it is a big deal or if it's not a big deal and that is are open rates. Is open rate tracking on email campaigns gonna be illegal? What? Yeah, this is what's going on. So I'll tell you how we got here and I'm going to tell you the impact it's going to have here in the United States. So you probably aren't following this because it's really nerdy stuff, but in both France and Italy, they both passed laws months ago that are actually going into effect July 14th. So in a few days. Right. So it's going to affect July 14th. And what basically the laws are that they both already passed is that of course in Europe you need to get explicit permission to be able to email somebody. But now in France and Italy specifically, you're going to need to have explicit permission to actually track if somebody opened up an email. You're going to need explicit permission to be able to give that person that open tracking pixel that we drop on people when they open up an email. So just to back up a second when you send out an email. Right. Whatever platform you use, the way that they know if you opened up an email or not is this tracking pixel that they use. Right. And that's what's done in every email that goes out. And so what has been the case in Europe specifically is, oh, somebody consents to getting email. Right. The understanding was that because they consented that they are, the marketer is also allowed to track the activity of the person doing stuff in the email if they opened it, or whatever they did. All right. But now in France and Italy, which goes into effect July 14, you are going to need explicit permission to be able to not only send them an email, but then to track whether or not the person opens the email. So people are saying, oh, wow, this is it. The open rate is finally going to die. Now, here's my two cents. Okay. Is the open rate going to die because of all this? No, it is. Open rate tracking is not going to Die because of all this? Not even a little bit. And that I want to talk about the impact it has here in the United States. So first off, why won't it die? People say open rates meaningless. It doesn't mean anything. Listen, open rate is not somebody buying a product. Open rate is not somebody requesting a demo. It is an upfront metric. It is a directional metric. All right? It is not an absolute metric. What I mean by that is every, if any open rate that you look at, you go into whatever system you use. This is, oh, I sent out an email campaign. I got a 40 open rate. No, you didn't. Okay, because listen, there's the apples inflating opens. There's bots that's inflating opens. There's so many things that are inflating opens in your tracking that whatever report you're using, it's inflated. News flash. We've known this for a while, but directionally, it's very valuable, right? So if you do an a B test on a subject line and one you know is a question mark. Subject line, and one doesn't. And the one with the question mark, subject line, one gets a 50% open rate, the other one gets a 30% open rate. Okay. The one with the question mark did better. It's directional. You have directional information. So now people are saying, oh, well, because of what's going on in France and Italy and we'll get to the US In a second. Does that mean that directional open rate tracking is dead there? I don't believe it is. Because here's what I think is going to happen. What's going to happen is, as there is with every type of thing, when you asking people for permission, there is always a significant statistically relevant portion of people that say, yes, you can track me. Yes, you could put that pixel in my. Whatever, yes, you can give me a cookie. People opt into this stuff because they like getting stuff. They also have no idea what. They don't read anything. Go check, check, check, check, check. So there's going to be a statistically relevant number of people that in Italy and France are going to say, yes, you can still give me pixels in my email. So let's say in the database in Italy and France, it's, you know, 20% of the people in your database. Amazing, okay? And then you're only able to really get that directional information on 20% of your database. You are then going to extrapolate that out and say, oh, this test that I ran, okay, where I got a higher open rate on this day instead of this day. Great. I know it's only 20% of my database, but that's enough data for me to believe that to be true. For all the data, I'll use that as the best day to send my email. So it's going to take us further down the rabbit hole in my opinion of directional usage of open rate tracking, knowing that the absolute metric of open rates is beyond flawed. Now, is that going to come to the United States? And the answer is absolutely not. And here's why. I'm not saying it shouldn't, I'm just saying it won't. So there has been no meaningful federal email legislation since can spam like a zillion years ago. And can spam is a negative option law that doesn't get into any of this stuff. There's been a lot of patchwork laws out there from different states covering different things, but it is like the Wild west out there as it relates to this patchwork of different state laws. And until there's federal legislation as it relates to email, it's going to be very, very, very hard for this to be something that really impacts marketers and whether or not they use open rate metrics. And here in the United States, it's the same thing with AI laws. Right? It's very difficult to get. And this is not a Please don't leave a comment about politics. I don't care. It doesn't matter who you like or whatever. Across the board, it is very hard to get any federal legislation related to privacy and marketing related activities passed. It just is. So I don't expect this to come to the US Anytime soon. But it is something we all need to be aware of what's going on out there. So I don't want to make this episode too long. So I'll share some other very small irrelevant things that are going on and then I want to get to ridiculous nonsense that's going on. So. So some of the other cool things that are going on out there Reddit finally announced this week the ability to do split testing for the ads that you run there. You can now actually run split tests on Reddit with the different ad vehicles. If you're not spending time looking at the new ad units that Reddit's been rolling out. I don't work for Reddit. We just seeing it perform really, really well. And and now that you could do split testing and run two ad variants at any time, I think people are sleeping on Reddit and running Reddit ads. They're crushing it. Okay, I'M going to jump right to it. Screw this. Before we get into the ridiculous portion of this podcast, I want to let you know that this podcast, this episode, is sponsored by CallRail. You're like, CallRail, what do they do? You make phone calls? No. They are the tool used by hundreds of thousands of businesses. Okay. To really measure your attribution and to use AI. What do I mean by that? People go to your forms. They fill them out. People do call your company, right? They leave. They reach out to people. They're coming in through all these different paid ads that you're running. Is it working? Is it not working? I don't know. That is what Call Rail does. If you go to CallRail.com do this, they have a free trial. You could try this for free. My company uses it. This is how we do our attribution tracking. Go to CallRail.com do this for the free trial. It is awesome. Check it out. All right. Let's see what's going on. That's complete nonsense. You don't care about Love island, but you should. This is the greatest show of all time. I just got to get it out of my system. Okay, it's almost over. It's going to be over on July 12th. I believe I'm rooting for Casey and Tierra and Melanie and Insincere. I don't call him sincere. That's his name. His name is Sincere. This guy's name is Sincere. Can you believe they have a guy in the show whose name is Sincere? Okay, and then he cheated on the girl that he's with, like, three times. And he. And. And the girl's still staying with him. What is wrong with people? So I call him insincere. He is not sincere. I am not rooting for him. I am also not going to be watching Silo season three. That just came out on Apple tv. Sci fi show. I do not like shows that go backwards in time, that go backwards and forwards and backwards and forwards. I also don't like that in books. So I can ever read a book and then, you know, you're in this chapter, and then the next chapter will say, four years ago. I'm like, I want to stay in the moment. I don't want the backstory. I want to. I also don't like movie prequels. I don't want backstory. I want to go forward. What are we doing now? So the whole season three of Silo is like a backstory, which is garbage. What else is garbage? Which I'm going to get Paid for is that was also coming about in about a week. Is Dancing with the Stars the next pro? Dancing with the Stars is Jumping the Shark. They're doing a reality show, okay. About how they're going to find the next dancer to be a pro on the show. It's hosted by Robert Irwin. Love that dude. He should just be the next pro. That guy was incredible. But this is where they jump the shark. They go into like reality tv. By the way, does everyone know the story of Jump the shark? Nobody cares. I'm going to tell you right now. So for you my age, when something gets cheesy or dorky or not cool anymore, we say this phrase, oh, it jumped the shark. Like I just said, dancing with Stars, jump the shark. Now you don't know where this came from, this phrase, but I'm going to tell you. So back in the day, there was a show called Happy Days which I used to watch and there was a character on there named the font who wore this leather jacket, okay? And the Fonz was like the coolest character ever. And then one episode of Happy Days they did a trip to Hawaii. Yes. And they did a trip to Hawaii. And the Fonz was water skiing and there was a shark in the water. And when the Fonz was water skiing, in order to get over the shark, he went over this ramp and he literally jumped the shark and he saved the day. And then right after the episode aired, that's what happened. Everyone basically that's when that show became garbage, when he jumped the shark. And then that became the phrase that we all say when something is not cool, jump the shark. So this is meaningless information that is in my brain, that is now in your brain. And I don't know what you could do with that. But if you do want to do something, I will tell you what you should do. If you have not picked up a copy of my book, Stupider people have done it. All of the author proceeds are going to the foundation for cancer Research. We just we've made a donate of donation of $130,000. This thing went to the bestseller list across the country. USA Today bestseller. It's not about me. I don't care about that. What I care about is I want to make more donations to the V Foundation. Pick up Stupider people have done it. Drop me an email. Leave it. Review Jump the Shark. I have no idea. We'll see at the next one. Wait, don't go anywhere. There's two really important things I want to tell you. First off, my book is out, Stupider people have done it. And I don't know how, but this book has made it to the USA Today bestseller list, one of the top books in the entire country. Now all net author proceeds are going to the V Foundation for Cancer Research. And between this book and things that we're doing, we've now donated 130, $30,000 in the fight against cancer. If you buy this book, if you buy the Kindle, the audio on Amazon, on Barnes and Noble, anywhere money is going to fight cancer. We need your help. Please grab a copy of Stupider People have Done It. The second thing is, I want to work with you. I want to amplify your brand. I want my agency to help you get more customers, more subscribers, more whatever. I want to partner with you in so many different ways. All you got to do is go to J schwedson.com jelson.com and then there's a button, the upper right hand corner that says partner. Fill out that form. Let's work together. Let's do stuff. And if this wasn't the worst podcast you've ever heard, it would be amazing. If you follow the show, if you leave a comment, if you tell your friends about it, I appreciate you. And go out there and crush it.
Do This, NOT That: Marketing Tips with Jay Schwedelson
Host: Jay Schwedelson (GURU Media Hub)
Episode 535: What’s Up THIS WEEK?! 📧 Tracking Email Opens is Now Illegal??
Date: July 7, 2026
This episode explores seismic changes in email marketing—particularly, new regulations in France and Italy that require explicit user consent to track email opens. Jay Schwedelson unpacks what these international privacy laws mean, debunks panic about the “death” of open rate metrics, and looks at their (non-)impact in the United States. The episode also touches on Reddit’s split-testing ad updates and dives into Jay’s signature “ridiculous nonsense”—including spirited commentary on Love Island, Silo, reality TV, and the origin of “jumping the shark.” Finally, Jay promotes his best-selling book and his agency’s offerings.
Background:
France and Italy’s new privacy laws (in effect July 14) mean marketers must secure explicit permission not just to send emails but also to track opens via pixels.
Clarification on Tracking Pixels:
Email platforms insert tracking pixels to register opens. Previously, consent to receive email was assumed to also cover this tracking, but the new laws now require a separate, explicit opt-in for tracking.
Implication:
Marketers may only get tracking permission from a fraction of their audience, not all.
Jay’s Take:
Not at all—open rate tracking is not going to “die.”
The Value of Open Rates:
Statistically Significant Samples:
Even if only 20% of users in France/Italy opt in to tracking, that cohort can still provide valuable data for testing (e.g., optimal send times, subject line tests).
Extrapolation:
Results from the tracking-enabled segment will be extrapolated to the broader list.
Short Answer: No.
Why Not?
Bottom Line:
No imminent impact on American email marketers. Still, staying informed on global developments is wise.
Reddit Ad Split Testing:
Attribution Tools Sponsor:
CallRail—Jay plugs this for tracking both online and offline conversions with AI-driven attribution. (Ad section, skipped per prompt)
Love Island Finale:
Jay’s unfiltered TV favorites, rooting for “Casey and Tierra and Melanie and Insincere (whose name is actually ‘Sincere’).”
Silo Season 3 (Apple TV):
Hates time-hopping narratives. “I want to stay in the moment. I don’t want the backstory.” (Jay, ~13:50)
Dancing with the Stars: “Jumping the Shark”:
On European Consent Laws:
“...Now in France and Italy, you are going to need explicit permission to be able to not only send them an email, but then to track whether or not the person opens the email.” (Jay, 01:34)
On Open Rates:
“It is a directional metric...if you do an A/B test...the one with a question mark did better. It’s directional–you have directional information.” (Jay, 04:30)
On U.S. Regulation:
“I don’t expect this to come to the US anytime soon. But it is something we all need to be aware of.” (Jay, 07:45)
On Reddit Ads:
“People are sleeping on Reddit and running Reddit ads. They’re crushing it.” (Jay, 10:39)
On TV Tropes:
“You don’t know where [jump the shark] came from, this phrase, but I’m going to tell you…” (Jay, 15:45)
Marketers Affected by EU Law:
Start prepping separate tracking opt-ins for France/Italy audiences. Use whatever sample size you net for directional data, and extrapolate as needed.
Rest of World (especially U.S.):
Don’t panic; watch and learn—but expect no immediate regulatory shockwaves.
All Marketers:
Front-load your experiments with directional metrics; accept that opens are inherently flawed but still useful for A/B trends.
Experiment with Reddit Ads:
Take advantage of new split-testing capabilities—it’s a quietly powerful channel.
Jay’s style is direct, kinetic, and conversational, blending approachable explanations with doses of humor, personal asides, and pop culture references. He’s unfiltered and enthusiastic, aiming to demystify marketing without taking himself too seriously.
For marketers wondering about international privacy shifts, the murky future of email metrics, or even which reality show’s worth your time—this episode delivers clarity, attitude, and actionable ideas.