Resilience

Email Marketing ROI for Publishers: How to Calculate and Maximize Returns

Email marketing is often cited as having $42 ROI per $1 spent (per Litmus's 2024 benchmark), but that figure aggregates ecommerce (high AOV, direct attribution) with publishers (low RPM, indirect attribution). Publishers typically see $8-$18 ROI per $1 spent—still profitable, but requiring different optimization strategies than ecommerce.

This article covers how publishers calculate email marketing ROI, attribute revenue accurately across display ads and affiliates, and optimize for profitability rather than vanity metrics like list growth.

The Publisher Email ROI Formula

Standard Formula

ROI = (Revenue from Email - Email Marketing Costs) / Email Marketing Costs

Components:

  1. Revenue from Email: Display ad revenue + affiliate commissions + sponsorships from email-driven traffic
  2. Email Marketing Costs: ESP fees + content production + design + time cost

Example Calculation

Monthly email program:

Let me recalculate:

Visits per campaign:

Opens = 30,000 × 24% = 7,200
Clicks = 7,200 × (3.8% / 24%) = 7,200 × 15.8% = 1,138

No wait, CTR is usually stated as % of total list, not % of opens. Let's clarify:

CTR definitions:

Assuming CTR = 3.8% of total list:

Clicks per campaign = 30,000 × 3.8% = 1,140

Revenue per campaign:

Total revenue per campaign = $25.17 + $54.60 + $50 = $129.77

Monthly revenue = $129.77 × 8 = $1,038

Email marketing costs:

ROI:

ROI = ($1,038 - $320) / $320 = $718 / $320 = 2.24

Interpretation: Every $1 spent on email generates $2.24 profit, or $3.24 total revenue.

In percentage terms: 224% ROI.

Attribution Challenge: Multi-Touch Revenue

Problem: Email Initiates, Organic Search Converts

User journey:

  1. Discovers site via email campaign (reads article)
  2. Bookmarks site
  3. Returns via organic search (different article)
  4. Clicks affiliate link in organic article

Last-click attribution: Credits organic search with affiliate revenue. First-touch attribution: Credits email with affiliate revenue.

Reality: Email initiated the relationship, organic search converted. Data-driven attribution would split credit (e.g., 60% email, 40% organic).

Solution: Email-Specific UTM Parameters + GA4 Attribution

Tag all email links with UTM parameters:

?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=2026-02-08

In GA4, use data-driven attribution (DDA) to redistribute credit across touchpoints.

Navigate to Admin → Attribution Settings → Data-driven (requires 400+ conversions/month).

Expected result: Email attribution lift of 20-40% compared to last-click.

Cost Components (Often Hidden)

Visible Costs

  1. ESP fees: $0 (Mailchimp free tier) → $300/month (Klaviyo at 50K+ subscribers)
  2. Email design: $0 (DIY templates) → $500/month (contractor)
  3. Copywriting: $0 (repurpose content) → $1,200/month (dedicated writer)

Hidden Costs

  1. Time cost: Founder/editor time (4-8 hours/week) = $80-$320/week at $20/hour opportunity cost
  2. List growth acquisition: $2-$8 per subscriber (lead magnets, ads, landing page optimization)
  3. Deliverability management: ESP warmup, list cleaning, authentication setup ($100-$500 one-time)

Total program cost (medium-sized publisher):

ESP: $120/month
Design: $240/month
Time: $160/month (4 hours/week × $10/hour)
List growth: $800/month (100 new subs × $8 CPS)
Total: $1,320/month

If email generates $2,600/month revenue, ROI is:

ROI = ($2,600 - $1,320) / $1,320 = 0.97 (97% ROI)

Still profitable, but far below the $42:1 myth.

Revenue Attribution: Display Ads

Challenge: Ads Appear on Every Pageview

All traffic generates ad revenue, making it hard to isolate email's contribution.

Solution: Incremental Revenue Analysis

Compare revenue with email vs. revenue without email:

  1. Pause email for 30 days (or segment half the list)
  2. Measure total site revenue during pause
  3. Resume email, measure revenue
  4. Difference = incremental revenue from email

Example:

ROI = ($2,600 - $1,320) / $1,320 = 97% ROI

Alternative: GA4 Conversion Path Report

GA4 → Advertising → Attribution → Conversion Paths

Filter for conversions (pageviews generating revenue) that include "email" in the path.

Example output:

Email influenced: 18% + 12% + 24% = 54% of conversions.

If total monthly revenue is $12,400:

Email-attributed revenue = $12,400 × 54% = $6,696

This approach over-attributes (email gets credit even when it's not causal), but it's directionally correct.

Revenue Attribution: Affiliate Commissions

Challenge: Affiliate Links Appear in Blog + Email

Users click affiliate links from:

Solution: Campaign-Specific Affiliate Links

Most affiliate programs (Amazon Associates, Impact, ShareASale) support custom tracking IDs:

Blog link: ?tag=yourblog-20
Email link: ?tag=yourblog-email-20

In your affiliate dashboard, segment revenue by tracking ID:

Email affiliate ROI:

ROI = ($420 - $1,320 email costs) / $1,320 = -68% (unprofitable from affiliates alone)

But combined with display ad revenue ($2,600):

Total email revenue = $2,600 (ads) + $420 (affiliates) = $3,020
ROI = ($3,020 - $1,320) / $1,320 = 1.29 (129% ROI)

Benchmark: Publisher Email ROI by Monetization Model

Monetization Mix Avg. Monthly ROI Top Quartile ROI
Ads only 80-120% 200-300%
Ads + Affiliates 140-220% 350-500%
Ads + Affiliates + Sponsorships 240-380% 600-900%
Paid subscriptions (Substack) 800-1,400% 2,000-3,500%

(Source: Litmus 2024, ConvertKit 2024, Substack 2024)

Key insight: Paid subscriptions (Substack, Ghost memberships) deliver 10x higher ROI than ad-only models because subscription revenue is direct (100% attributable) vs. ads (incremental attribution).

Optimizing ROI: Three Levers

Lever 1: Reduce Costs (ESP + Time)

Tactic 1: Switch to cheaper ESP

ESP Cost (30K subscribers) Notes
Mailchimp $280/month Industry standard, expensive at scale
ConvertKit $180/month Creator-focused, cheaper
beehiiv $99/month Publisher-specific, built-in monetization
Listmonk (self-hosted) $15/month (VPS) Open-source, full control

Switching from Mailchimp ($280) to beehiiv ($99) saves $181/month = $2,172/year.

Tactic 2: Repurpose Content (Reduce Time Cost)

Don't write custom email content. Repurpose blog posts:

Savings: 1.5 hours/campaign × 8 campaigns/month = 12 hours/month = $240/month at $20/hour.

Lever 2: Increase Revenue (Diversify Monetization)

Tactic 1: Add Affiliate Links

Every email should include 2-3 affiliate recommendations:

Expected lift: +30-60% email revenue (affiliate commissions often exceed ad revenue).

Tactic 2: Sell Sponsorships

At 20K+ subscribers, sell sponsored email spots:

Revenue example: $600/campaign × 2 sponsors/month = $1,200/month.

Tactic 3: Launch Paid Tier

Convert 5-10% of free subscribers to paid ($5-$15/month):

ROI: Near-infinite (minimal marginal cost for paid tier).

Lever 3: Improve Engagement (Open Rate + CTR)

Tactic 1: Segment by Engagement

Send different frequencies to different segments:

Expected lift: +20-35% open rates for high engagers.

Tactic 2: Optimize Send Times

Test send times via A/B testing:

Time Open Rate CTR Visits
6 AM 22% 3.5% 1,020
10 AM 26% 4.1% 1,230
2 PM 19% 2.9% 870

Switching from 6 AM → 10 AM increases visits by 21%+21% revenue.

Tactic 3: Subject Line Testing

A/B test 2 subject lines per campaign:

Expected lift: +10-18% open rates for curiosity-driven vs. generic.

Case Study: Publisher Increases Email ROI from 110% to 420%

Background: A tech news publisher (28K subscribers) earned $1,800/month from email (ads only).

Costs: $1,200/month (ESP $140, design $240, time $400, list growth $420).

ROI: ($1,800 - $1,200) / $1,200 = 50% (profitable but low).

Optimization strategy:

  1. Switched ESP: Mailchimp → beehiiv (saved $41/month)
  2. Repurposed content: Cut email writing time from 8 hours → 2 hours/week (saved $240/month)
  3. Added affiliates: 3 tool recs per email → +$680/month revenue
  4. Sold sponsorships: 2 sponsors/month at $800 each → +$1,600/month revenue
  5. Segmented sends: High engagers (40% of list) receive 3x/week → +18% opens

Results (6 months later):

ROI: ($5,200 - $920) / $920 = 4.65 (465% ROI, up from 50%).

Tools for Email ROI Tracking

Self-hosted: Listmonk (open-source ESP, $0 software + $15/month VPS).

FAQ

Q: Should I include list growth costs in ROI calculations? Yes, if you're actively growing. Exclude if list is stable (no acquisition spend).

Q: How do I calculate ROI for a paid newsletter (Substack)? Revenue = Subscriber count × Price × 90% (Substack takes 10%). Costs = Time + content production. ROI is typically 1,000-3,000% for paid newsletters.

Q: What if my email costs are mostly time (not cash)? Use opportunity cost (what you could earn doing something else). If you value your time at $50/hour and spend 5 hours/week on email, that's $1,000/month in costs.

Q: Can I improve ROI by sending fewer emails? Only if current frequency causes list fatigue (declining open rates). Test reducing by 25% and measure revenue change.

Q: What's the minimum list size for positive ROI? 3,000-5,000 subscribers if using free ESP tiers. Below that, time costs exceed revenue.


Next steps: Calculate your current email ROI (revenue - costs ÷ costs). If <100%, audit costs (switch ESP, reduce time). If 100-200%, add **affiliate links** and **sponsorships**. If >300%, consider paid tier (5-10x ROI multiplier). Track monthly and optimize quarterly.

Stop gambling on single traffic sources.

Find gives you the complete framework for building, measuring, and defending a diversified traffic portfolio. Calculators, templates, and the full methodology.

Get Find — $997

Related Analysis

← All Articles