Nobody likes getting dumped. Okay, almost nobody likes getting dumped. Not sure about the masochist types out there.
So when someone unsubscribes, it’s tempting to treat it like a tiny personal betrayal. (Fine, Jennifer. Enjoy your empty inbox and your perfect little life.) Most teams don’t like looking at that unsub number. Opens are fun and clicks are fun and revenue gets its own high five moment. But Unsubscribes? Those get quietly removed from the presentation so you can make sure you get that high five moment later.
There's a silver lining in everything, though. Unsubscribes are not just rejection; they’re feedback from people who were interested enough to join, stuck around for a while, and then decided something had changed.
At Canyon Bikes, Fernando Rubino Pereira’s team stopped treating every unsubscribe as a total loss. They studied what people were opting out of, gave them more control over what stayed in their inbox, and used that data to improve engagement.
Turns out the people leaving your email program may be the ones telling you how to fix it.