AI Personalization

A Case for the Promotions Tab: Why More Brands Are Designing for It, Not Avoiding It

Erica Dingman

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Associate Director, Product Marketing

June 3, 2026

IN A NUTSHELL

• Promotions has become a more strategic environment for many marketing emails.
• Gmail's deal annotations and offer previews help shoppers discover relevant promotions faster.
• Clear offers, strong visual hierarchy, and scannable content are replacing inbox "tricks."
• As Gmail's AI evolves, clarity and relevance play a bigger role in visibility and engagement.

The Primary Tab Goal Is Shifting

For years, landing in the Primary tab was the benchmark. If your email made it there, you'd cleared the highest hurdle: you weren't spam, you weren't buried, in fact, you had a real shot at engagement. The Promotions tab, by contrast, was where email went to be ignored.

That assumption is now being totally reconsidered.

As Gmail continues to evolve its AI-powered inbox experience, some brands are finding something unexpected. Their promotional emails actually perform better in the Promotions tab. One major apparel retailer analyzed their engagement data and noticed stronger click and conversion rates among subscribers engaging from pPromotions. The finding prompted a deliberate shift: structuring emails in ways that support, rather than fight against, placement there.

Primary still has an important role to play, but inbox strategy is becoming more nuanced. For many brands, the Promotions tab has evolved into a far more strategic environment than it was once given credit for.

The Promotions Tab Is Built for Shopping Behavior

There's a logic to it. When someone opens the Promotions tab, they're not sorting through bills or catching up on personal threads. They're often in discovery mode which may mean browsing, comparing, or looking for a specific deal. That's a fundamentally different mindset than Primary inbox traffic, and promotional content fits that context naturally.

Gmail has reinforced this by building a set of features specifically designed to make promotions clearer to consumers and more effective for brands, including:

  • Deal annotations, which surface offer details such as discount amounts, promo codes, and expiration dates directly in the preview pane before an email is even opened.
  • Offer previews and time-sensitive labels, which can increase visibility and help shoppers quickly identify relevant promotions.
  • Visual merchandising features, which make product imagery and promotional content feel more natural and expected within the promotions experience.

This might seem counterintuitive. Giving shoppers more information before they open an email can reduce opens in some cases, but it often leads to more qualified engagement. When customers can quickly determine whether an offer is relevant, they're more likely to interact with the promotions that matter to them.

What has emerged is a tab optimized for commercial intent. Rather than treating promotions as something to avoid, many marketers are building strategies around it.

Brands Are Structuring Emails Accordingly

The tactical shift is showing up in how emails are actually built. Rather than crafting subject lines that obscure the offer, brands leaning into promotions are being clear and direct. This might mean leading with the discount, the limited-time hook, or a dedicated product drop. In the Promotions tab, urgency cues and explicit deal language often help rather than hurt performance.

Inside the email, the approach favors scannability over long narratives. Product grids, bold price callouts, clear promotional framing, and strong visual hierarchy are replacing the editorial, conversational layouts that once aimed for a "newsletter feel."

The goal is still to deliver curated, personalized content, but in a way that makes the value immediately obvious. When a customer gives an email only a quick glance, they should be able to understand what's being offered and why it matters.

Brands are also thinking beyond the open itself. Preview surfaces like deal annotations and subject line previews are becoming part of the creative brief. If someone never opens the email but sees the offer in the preview pane and clicks through to the site, that's still a win. Designing for that moment requires promotional clarity from the very first character.

This Is Also about AI Visibility

There's a longer game at play, too. As Gmail's AI inbox experience continues to evolve, the systems interpreting and organizing email are becoming as important an audience as the human recipient. Gemini reads subject lines, body copy, images, alt text, and promotional metadata to determine how to categorize, summarize, and surface content. 

At the same time, more Gmail users are relying on tabbed inboxes, which means most marketing emails will land in Promotions. Once there, visibility is increasingly influenced by relevance rather than recency. Gmail is prioritizing the messages it believes users are most likely to engage with, rewarding emails that are easy for both customers and AI systems to understand.

1. Make every email count

Increase visibility by delivering content tailored to each customer. Personalized experiences tend to drive stronger opens, clicks, and engagement, all of which Gmail uses as signals when determining which messages deserve attention.

2. Stop equating more emails with better results

Gmail evaluates engagement relative to send volume. If volume increases while engagement declines, your performance can suffer. Success increasingly depends on sending the right message at the right time rather than simply sending more.

Da Vinci can help with that.

Da Vinci's Frequency Optimization helps marketers determine the ideal send cadence for each customer, balancing engagement opportunities with the risk of over-sending.

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Once you've nailed the broader strategy for the Promotions tab, you can start fine-tuning the details. Emails with clear, descriptive subject lines, explicit offers, and intent-aligned messaging are easier for AI systems to understand than emails that try to disguise promotional content behind editorial framing. Live text, structured discount data, and clear calls to action provide even more context.

In other words, clarity will get you further than cleverness. Marketers who embrace structure and transparency aren't just making it easier for customers to understand what's being offered. They're also making it easier for Gmail to determine when those messages should be surfaced.

What helps customers quickly understand a message is often what helps Gmail understand it, too. Increasingly, those goals are aligned.

"Best Placement" Depends on the Goal

The idea that Primary is always better than Promotions has never told the full story, and today's inbox makes that even clearer. Different tabs serve different purposes, and success depends on how well your message matches the environment where it's delivered.

For brands with strong promotional offers, seasonal merchandise, and deal-driven audiences, Promotions may be the environment where emails are most expected, most relevant, and most likely to convert.

The most important consideration is where your customers are most primed to engage and whether your emails are built to meet them there.