In This Article
Learn why video emails get 96% more clicks than text, plus step-by-step instructions for recording and sending them in Gmail, Outlook, and iPhone.
Researchers estimate that humans have been communicating face-to-face for at least 150,000 years. The printing press arrived about 580 years ago, but widespread literacy is a surprisingly recent achievement—most of the world couldn’t read until the 20th century.1 For the vast majority of human history, communication was voice-to-voice and face-to-face.
And yet, the average professional now receives about 120 emails per day and spends 3 to 5 hours reading and writing them. Global daily email volume is projected to hit 393 billion in 2026.2 That’s a lot of faceless black text on white screens.
Video emails offer a way to bring the human element back.
This article was originally co-written with Ethan Beute, then Chief Evangelist at BombBomb and co-author of Rehumanize Your Business. The content below is platform-agnostic and reflects Science of People’s independent editorial standards.
What Is a Video Email?
A video email is an email that includes video content, typically through a clickable thumbnail image that links to a hosted video rather than an attached file. When the recipient clicks the thumbnail, they watch the video on a landing page or video player. Video emails combine the convenience of email with the personal touch of face-to-face communication, letting recipients see your face, hear your tone, and read your body language.
Why Video Emails Work: The Brain Science
Most advice about video email focuses on marketing metrics. But the real reason video emails outperform text goes deeper than click-through rates.
Your Inbox Puts Your Brain in a Bad Mood
A neuroscience study by B2B DecisionLabs and Vidyard fitted 39 business professionals with EEG caps, heart rate monitors, and eye-tracking equipment, then measured their brain activity while reading emails. The finding: simply scrolling through text-based emails triggered brain patterns associated with anxiety and annoyance. Long paragraphs made it worse—participants lost focus quickly and reported higher fatigue.
But when participants encountered a video email in the same inbox, something shifted. The negative emotional trajectory was completely neutralized. Recipients moved into what researchers described as a “happy, pleased, or alert” state.3 Video acted as a pattern interrupt, giving the overwhelmed brain a break from decoding walls of text.
Video emails don’t just perform better on metrics—they literally shift the recipient’s brain from stressed to receptive.
Even more striking: after watching a video email, participants returned to the remaining text emails in a neutral state rather than a negative one. A single video had reset their stress levels for everything that followed.
We Remember What We See
In that same study, about 60% of participants remembered zero emails within 48 hours. Among those who did remember something, 59% recalled details from video emails compared to just 46% from well-written text emails.3 This aligns with the Cognitive Theory of Multimedia Learning: the brain processes information more effectively when it receives both visual and auditory input simultaneously.
Nonverbal Cues Drive Trust
Research by Vanessa Bohns at Cornell found that face-to-face requests are 34 times more successful than email—largely because we can see the other person’s face, hear their voice, and pick up on nonverbal cues.4 Video email can’t fully replicate being in the room, but it brings back many of those missing human elements that plain text strips away: facial expressions, tone of voice, hand gestures, and the subtle cues that signal sincerity.
Through video, your recipients can:
- Read your body language
- Hear your tone of voice
- Experience layers of meaning beyond words
- Better determine what it would be like to work with you
- Accurately gauge your sincerity and conviction
The Numbers: Do Video Emails Actually Work?
The engagement data is hard to ignore:
- Emails with video generate about 96% higher click-through rates than text-only emails (based on a study of 1 billion emails)5
- Including the word “video” in a subject line boosts open rates by about 19% and reduces unsubscribes by 26%6
- Personalized video emails generate 3x more replies than generic video emails7
- HubSpot achieved 4x more booked meetings after implementing video across its sales organization8
- Teams using video saw a 26% increase in replies in a Salesloft analysis of 134 million emails9
When to Send a Video Instead of Text
Any time you have a message that would be best communicated in person—but you can’t stop by someone’s office or don’t want to schedule a full meeting—you have an opportunity to use video. Here are the highest-impact moments:
- Thank-you messages (one of the easiest and most effective uses of video)
- Greetings on holidays and special occasions
- Introductions before appointments and follow-ups after
- Apology notes where tone and sincerity matter
- Project or process updates that are hard to explain in text
- Meeting summaries and next steps
- Complicated explanations that would take paragraphs to type
- Demonstrations of something better seen than described
Pro Tip: If you work in an industry with heavy paperwork or a complex system, record one walkthrough video you can reuse. Clients will thank you.
Each of these situations gives you an opportunity to deliver tone, intent, and body language. From enthusiasm and gratitude to empathy and concern, the subtleties lost when you type these messages out are significant.
Any time your message would be better delivered in person but you can’t be there, that’s a video email opportunity.
Why You Can’t Just Attach a Video to an Email
Before you record anything, you need to understand a technical reality that trips up most beginners: you can’t simply attach a video file to an email the way you’d attach a PDF.
Two problems stand in the way:
- File size limits. Gmail caps attachments at 25 MB. Outlook caps at 20 MB. A single minute of 1080p video is typically 100 to 200 MB—far exceeding those limits.
- Security restrictions. Most email clients (Gmail, Outlook, Yahoo, and most Android mail apps) strip out or block HTML5 video tags to prevent malware. Only Apple Mail supports limited direct video playback.10
The industry-standard workaround is to link a clickable thumbnail to a hosted video:
- Host your video on YouTube (set to “Unlisted”), Google Drive, OneDrive, or a platform like Loom or Vidyard
- Take a screenshot of a compelling frame from your video
- Add a play button overlay using Canva or any simple image editor
- Insert the thumbnail image into your email
- Hyperlink it to your hosted video URL
This creates the visual impression of an embedded video while working across every email client.
Built-in workarounds:
- Gmail: When you try to attach a file over 25 MB, Gmail automatically uploads it to Google Drive and inserts a link
- Outlook: Offers to upload and share as a OneDrive link for oversized files
- iPhone (Mail Drop): Handles files up to 5 GB by uploading to iCloud and sending a download link that expires in 30 days
How to Send a Video Email: 3 Methods
Method 1: The Quick DIY Approach (Gmail or Outlook)
- Record your video using your phone’s camera or your laptop’s webcam
- Upload to YouTube (set to Unlisted), Google Drive, or OneDrive
- Take a screenshot of an engaging frame where you’re smiling or gesturing
- Open Canva and add a play button overlay to the screenshot
- Compose your email, insert the thumbnail image
- Hyperlink the image to your video URL (Ctrl+K or Cmd+K)
- Add “[VIDEO]” to your subject line for a potential 19% open rate boost
Method 2: Use a Video Email Platform
- Install a browser extension (Loom, Vidyard, Sendspark, or BombBomb)
- Click “Record” directly from your Gmail or Outlook inbox
- Record your webcam, screen, or both
- The platform automatically generates a thumbnail and hosting link
- Paste into your email—most platforms handle the formatting automatically
- Track who watches, how long they watch, and when they click your CTA
Method 3: Send from iPhone
- Open Photos and select your video
- Tap Share → Mail
- If the file is too large, tap “Use Mail Drop” (handles up to 5 GB via iCloud)
- Alternatively, share via iCloud Link for the highest quality
- Or upload to Google Drive first and share the link
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Video Email Platforms Compared
You don’t need a platform to send video emails—the DIY method works fine. But if you send videos regularly, a dedicated tool saves time and adds analytics.
| Platform | Best For | Starting Price | Free Option | Key Strength |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loom | Quick async updates, internal comms | $18/user/mo | 25 videos, 5-min limit | Fastest recording-to-sending workflow |
| Vidyard | Enterprise sales, CRM integration | $59/user/mo | 5 videos/mo | Deepest analytics + Salesforce/HubSpot integration |
| Sendspark | Personalized outreach at scale | $39/seat/mo | 30 videos | AI-powered one-to-many personalization |
| BombBomb | Relationship-based sales | $36/mo | 14-day trial | Real-time viewer notifications, unlimited recording |
Key considerations:
- For analytics: Vidyard shows engagement timelines, CTA tracking, and syncs viewer data to your CRM
- For speed: Loom lets you record, copy a link, and send in under 2 minutes
- For scale: Sendspark lets you record one video and dynamically insert each prospect’s name and company details across hundreds of recipients
- For automation: Most platforms integrate with CRM tools like Salesforce and HubSpot, letting you trigger follow-up sequences based on who watched your video and for how long
AI-Powered Video Email: What’s Changed
The biggest shift in video email is AI-driven personalization at scale:
- Sendspark lets you record one video and automatically inserts each prospect’s name and a screenshot of their company website across hundreds of emails
- HeyGen and Synthesia create AI-generated video avatars that can deliver personalized messages in 130+ languages
- CRM integration means sales teams can see which prospects watched their videos (and for how long) directly in Salesforce or HubSpot, then trigger automated follow-ups based on engagement
These tools make it possible to get the personal feel of a one-to-one video at the scale of a mass email campaign. The technology is evolving fast—but the fundamentals of recording a good video haven’t changed.
How to Record a Great Video Email
Nail Your First 3 Seconds
The most important part of your video is the opening. Here’s how to make it count:
Eye contact: Look into the camera lens, not at the screen. Your automatic reaction will be to look at your own face or at the preview window. Resist that. When you look into the lens, your recipient feels direct eye contact on playback, which increases personal connection and trust.
Show your hands: Push the camera back so your torso and hands are visible. Research shows that people trust others more when they can see their hands. Start with a wave hello—it’s disarming and signals openness. Hand gestures also make your message more engaging and memorable—check out 20 Hand Gestures You Should Be Using for specific techniques you can use on camera.
Smile before you hit record: Research finds that people who smile appear more likable, courteous, and competent. Start smiling before you press record so the first frame your recipient sees is warm and inviting. Many video email platforms auto-generate an animated thumbnail from the first 3 seconds—if you’re waving and smiling, your open rates go up.
Research by Professor Richard Wiseman at the University of Hertfordshire found that people can distinguish between fake and real smiles about 60% of the time. The difference is in the eyes: a genuine smile creates crow’s feet crinkles that a forced smile doesn’t. So don’t paste on a grin—think of something that genuinely makes you happy right before you record.11
Skip the Script
Don’t write a script and read it on camera. Here’s why:
- You’ll break eye contact to glance at your notes
- You’ll focus on getting the words right instead of connecting with the person
- Your delivery will sound rehearsed, and people can tell
The more naturally you speak, the more charismatic you come across. Stumbles and pauses? They actually make you more relatable. Nobody speaks in perfect paragraphs in real life.
What to do instead: Before recording, jot down three things: (1) who the video is for, (2) the one or two points you want to make, and (3) your call to action. That’s your entire outline. Then hit record and talk like you’re speaking to a colleague over coffee.
Talk to One Person
When you can, send personal one-to-one videos. They’re more effective because your recipient feels the time you took to record something specifically for them.
When you need to record a video for a group or a reusable template, picture one specific person from that audience and talk directly to them. Each viewer is probably watching alone—so a conversational, one-on-one tone will feel natural.
Pro Tip: Weave in a personal detail when possible. Something like, “I saw your team just launched that new product line—congratulations!” triggers a positive response because it signals you actually pay attention.
Get Your Lighting Right
You don’t need a lighting kit. You just need to know where the light is and face toward it.
- Best option: Sit facing a window with natural light
- Second best: Position a desk lamp in front of you (not behind you)
- Avoid: Sitting with a bright window behind you—this turns you into a silhouette
- Outdoors: Shoot shortly after sunrise or before sunset for the most flattering light. A little cloud cover actually helps by filtering harsh direct sunlight
The goal isn’t studio-quality production. The goal is that your recipient can clearly see your face and expressions.
Build Your Camera Confidence
One of the biggest hurdles to recording video emails is discomfort with how you look or sound on camera.
If you see yourself on camera and cringe, you’re normal. Most people don’t love how they look in recordings. But the only person fixating on your appearance is you. Everyone else is too busy worrying about how they look.
The voice issue is real too. How you hear your own voice (through bone conduction inside your skull) is physically different from how everyone else hears you. The voice on the recording? That’s how you’ve always sounded to other people. They’re used to it. They’re not judging it.
The only person fixating on how you look on camera is you. Everyone else is too busy worrying about how they look.
As Brené Brown writes in Daring Greatly, “Vulnerability is the birthplace of love, belonging, joy, courage, empathy, and creativity.”12 Showing your face on camera instead of hiding behind text is an act of vulnerability—and that’s precisely what builds connection. The confidence it requires is attractive. The honesty is rare. People notice and appreciate both.
Action Step: The 20-Video Warmup
Your first video will feel awkward. That’s fine. Here’s how to push through:
- Send your first 20 videos to friends, family, or coworkers. Just tell them something you appreciate about them.
- Pick one or two business use cases (appointment confirmations, thank-you follow-ups) and start recording those.
- Actually send every video you record. The positive responses are what build your confidence.
The first time someone replies with “That was the best email I’ve ever received” or “You made my day,” you’ll understand why video is worth the initial discomfort.
Video Email Best Practices: Thumbnails, CTAs, and Length
Thumbnail Tips
Your thumbnail is the first thing recipients see, and it determines whether they click play:
- Always add a play button overlay. This is the single most important element—it signals “this is a video” and dramatically increases clicks.
- Feature your real face showing genuine warmth or curiosity. Avoid exaggerated “shocked” expressions.
- Consider an animated GIF thumbnail. A 3 to 5 second looping preview grabs attention in a static inbox.
- Keep text on the thumbnail to 4 words or less. Create a curiosity gap: “Quick idea for you…”
CTA Strategy
- Place your call to action directly on or immediately below the video thumbnail
- Use first-person language (“Show me how” converts better than “Watch Video”)
- Add a secondary low-pressure CTA (“Read the summary”) for people who can’t watch right now
- Make buttons at least 44 x 44 pixels for mobile viewers—over half of email opens happen on phones
Video Length Guidelines
- Cold outreach: 45 to 60 seconds max
- Follow-ups and nurturing: 60 to 90 seconds
- Product demos or walkthroughs: Under 2 minutes
- Viewer retention drops sharply after 90 seconds—front-load your key message
Video Emails Takeaway
Your inbox is crowded, impersonal, and stressful—for you and for everyone you email. Video cuts through all of that by restoring the nonverbal cues humans have relied on for 150,000 years.
Here are your next steps:
- Send one video email today. Pick a thank-you or a follow-up and record it on your phone or webcam. No fancy equipment needed.
- Look into the lens, not the screen. This one change makes your video feel like eye contact.
- Smile before you hit record so your thumbnail captures warmth.
- Skip the script. Jot down your two key points and your call to action, then talk naturally.
- Add “[VIDEO]” to your subject line for an open rate boost.
- Keep it under 90 seconds for maximum retention.
- Track your results. If you send more than a few videos per week, try a free tier of Loom or Vidyard to see who watches and for how long.
The technology is simple. The science is clear. The only thing left is to hit record.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a video email?
A video email is an email that includes video content, typically via a clickable thumbnail image that links to a hosted video. When the recipient clicks the thumbnail, they watch the video on a landing page or player. It combines the convenience of email with the personal touch of seeing someone’s face and hearing their voice.
How do you send a video email?
Three ways: (1) Record a video, upload it to YouTube or Google Drive, screenshot a frame, add a play button in Canva, and hyperlink the image in your email. (2) Use a video email platform like Loom or Vidyard that handles recording, hosting, and tracking automatically. (3) On iPhone, use Mail Drop for files up to 5 GB.
Why can’t you email videos directly?
Two reasons: file size limits (Gmail caps at 25 MB, Outlook at 20 MB, and a single minute of HD video is 100 to 200 MB) and security restrictions (most email clients block video playback to prevent malware). The standard workaround is linking a thumbnail image to a hosted video.
How do I email a video that is too big?
Four options: (1) Gmail automatically uploads to Google Drive when you exceed 25 MB. (2) Use a cloud service like Google Drive, OneDrive, or Dropbox and share the link. (3) Compress the video using free tools like HandBrake (desktop) or VideoCandy (online) to lower the resolution. (4) On iPhone, use Mail Drop, which handles files up to 5 GB via iCloud.
How do I send a 10-minute video from iPhone?
Use Apple’s Mail Drop feature. Attach the video in the Mail app, and when prompted, tap “Use Mail Drop.” It uploads to iCloud (up to 5 GB) and sends a download link that expires in 30 days. Alternatively, upload to Google Drive from your phone and share the link.
Do video emails actually improve engagement and conversions?
Yes. Emails with video generate about 96% higher click-through rates than text-only emails. Including the word “video” in a subject line boosts open rates by about 19%. HubSpot reported 4x more booked meetings after implementing video across its sales team. Neuroscience research also shows that video emails shift recipients from a stressed state to a receptive one, making them more likely to act.
How do I resize a video for email?
Use HandBrake (free desktop tool) to lower resolution from 1080p to 720p, which can cut file size by 50 to 75%. Online tools like FreeConvert or VideoCandy also work. On iPhone, apps like Video Compress can shrink a large file to under 100 MB. For most video emails, 720p resolution is more than sufficient.
What are the best video email platforms?
The top options are Loom (best for quick async communication, free tier available), Vidyard (best for sales teams needing CRM integration and deep analytics), Sendspark (best for AI-powered personalization at scale), and BombBomb (best for relationship-driven industries like real estate). All offer browser extensions that let you record and send directly from Gmail or Outlook.
Footnotes (12)
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Our World in Data estimates global literacy was around 12% in 1820 and didn’t reach a majority until the 1980s. ↩
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Bohns & Roghanizad (2017), Harvard Business Review. Note: this study compared in-person requests to strangers vs. cold email, not video email vs. text email. Video captures some but not all of the benefits of physical presence. ↩
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Brené Brown, Daring Greatly (2012), p. 34. ↩