Here’s a frustrating truth: even if someone signs up for your emails, they might never actually see them. Why?
Because Gmail throws them into the Promotions tab. Or worse, the spam folder.
It happened to me early on. I had subscribers excited to get my new course, but I kept getting emails like: “Hey, I never got anything.” Turns out, everything was landing in junk. That’s when I learned the power of whitelisting — and how to get my emails back in front of the people who wanted them.
Here’s how you can do the same, without sounding needy or spammy.
What Is Whitelisting, Really?
Whitelisting is just a fancy way of saying “Add me to your contact list.”
When someone whitelists your email address, they’re telling their inbox, “Hey, I want to hear from this person. Don’t send them to spam.”
It boosts your sender reputation, helps you avoid the junk folder, and improves your open rates. Basically, it tells email providers you’re the good kind of marketer. If you want more deliverability wins, make sure you’re also following best practices for avoiding spam filters and landing in the inbox.
Why You Should Ask Customers to Do It?
Let’s be clear: even with double opt-in and permission-based marketing, inbox algorithms can still bury your emails.
Asking subscribers to whitelist you:
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Increases your open rates
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Improves deliverability for future emails
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Keeps your launch emails, receipts, or updates front and center
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Shows customers how much you value their attention
And no — it’s not annoying if you do it the right way.
It’s especially powerful when combined with a high-converting welcome email that sets expectations from the start.
When to Ask? (Timing Is Everything)
I’ve tested this across welcome sequences and promos. Here’s what works best:
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Right after they sign up — Include a line in your welcome email.
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During onboarding — “Step 1: Check your inbox. Step 2: Add us to contacts.”
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Before a product launch — “Don’t miss this — whitelist us now.”
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If engagement drops — Use it in re-engagement emails as a reminder.
Pro tip: Include it before you need it, not after someone complains.
If you’re segmenting, use your email list segmentation strategies to target cold or unengaged subscribers with custom reminders to whitelist.
How to Ask Without Being Awkward?
Here’s the language I’ve found that works (and sounds human):
“Want to make sure you get our weekly goodies? Just add [you@yourdomain.com] to your contact list.”
Or…
“If you use Gmail, drag this email to your ‘Primary’ tab so we don’t end up lost in the Promotions abyss.”
You’re not begging — you’re being helpful. It’s about making their inbox easier to manage.
Include a Simple How-To (Or Link to One)
Most people don’t know how to whitelist you, so help them out.
Create a basic whitelist page that covers:
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Gmail: Add to contacts or drag to Primary tab
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Apple Mail: Tap on email > Add to VIP or contacts
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Outlook: Right-click > Add sender to safe senders
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Yahoo: Add to address book
Then link it in your welcome email:
“Here’s a quick guide to make sure you don’t miss our emails.”
Bonus points if you include screenshots or a short video. And if you’re tracking performance, use email analytics to improve open rates and monitor whether people are actually seeing your content.
Copy & Paste Examples for Your Emails
Here are a few I’ve actually used:
In the Welcome Email:
“P.S. To make sure you get everything, add [you@domain.com] to your contacts. Here’s how.”
In a Launch Sequence:
“Big stuff coming soon — whitelist us now so you don’t miss a thing.”
In the Footer of a Newsletter:
“Not seeing our emails? Add us to your contacts or check your Promotions tab!”
Extra Tips That Make It Work
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Keep it casual — no legal-sounding language
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Make it visual — emojis or screenshots help
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Offer a benefit — “Whitelist us and get early access to next week’s bonus drop”
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Repeat it — place in welcome, footer, re-engagement
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Test it — see which placements get the most clicks
A great time to incorporate this is when creating a monthly newsletter,the more value-packed your content, the more likely customers will want to whitelist you on their own.
Final Thoughts
Whitelisting doesn’t have to be awkward. If someone joined your list, they want to hear from you, they just need a little nudge to make sure your emails don’t get buried.
Be helpful. Be clear. And make it easy.
Because when your emails actually land where they’re supposed to? That’s when the real magic (clicks, replies, sales) starts happening.



