Read first post:
"we signed a development contract with a company specialised into building drag and drop editors and they started development on our own Drag and Drop builder which should be done till the end of the summer."
The only drag & drop editor I would use is a drag & drop editor where I can create my own drag & drop elements, with my own html code. Html for emails is not simple. You have to write perfect code to make the email work in all major mail clients (and keep the file size as small as possible). And...
You may want to use normal links (with https:// if possible) for images.
Do not use base64 images. Spam filters may block your email. If you use big images your html file size will be very big, and you want the file size to be as small as possible because large files cause problems in mail...
Spam filters are complex, different, and personal. You can't tell if your email will go to inbox just doing a test.
You have to take care of all aspects (email collection, content, code, email server, reputation, etc.) to increase your rates.
I didn't had time to review it, but at a quick look it's too much useless code.
I like my emails to have just the code they use. Also, the code is hard to read.
No. And I was curios to see the html because all drag and drop editors I've tried are bad, and can't create proper html.
I don't even view my emails in the visual editor mail softwares provide because they change my code.
I have a client with a inhouse mail system and his visual editor added a...
@Jatin Sahani I'm interested in the html code your drag and drop editor can create.
If possible I would like to test a newsletter made with your editor.