Creating an automation mail
On this page:
To send an email inside an automation, you must create an automation mail.
An automation mail can be created like this:
AutomationMail::create()
->from('sender@example.com')
->subject('Welcome to Mailcoach')
->content($html)
->trackOpens()
->trackClicks();
The trackOpens
and trackClicks
calls are optional.
Alternatively, you could manually set the attributes on an AutomationMail
model.
AutomationMail::create([
'from_email' => 'sender@example.com',
'subject' => 'My newsletter #1',
'content' => $html,
'track_opens' => true,
'track_clicks' => true,
]);
Setting the content and using placeholders
You can set the content of an automation mail by setting its HTML
attribute.
$automationMail->html = $yourHtml;
$automationMail->save();
In that HTML you can use these placeholders which will be replaced when sending out the automation mail:
::unsubscribeUrl::
: this string will be replaced with the URL that, when hit, will immediately unsubscribe the person that clicked it::unsubscribeTag::your tag::
: this string will be replaced with the URL that, when hit, will remove the “your tag” tag from the subscriber that clicked it::webviewUrl
: this string will be replaced with the URL that will display the content of your automation mail.
If there is no way for a subscriber to unsubscribe, it will result in a lot of frustration on the part of the subscriber. We always recommend using ::unsubscribeUrl::
in the HTML of each automation mail you send.
Setting a from name
To set a from name, just pass the name as a second parameter to from
AutomationMail::create()->from('sender@example.com', 'Sender name')
Setting a reply to
Optionally, you can set a reply to email and name like this
AutomationMail::create()->replyTo('john@example.com', 'John Doe')