Phone:
(701)814-6992
Physical address:
6296 Donnelly Plaza
Ratkeville, Bahamas.
Emma is an email marketing platform built for brands that want to prioritize style, control, and strategic personalization. Founded in 2005 and now part of the Campaign Monitor family, Emma was designed with agencies, universities, and growing teams in mind—especially those managing multiple brands or departments.
It excels at:
What makes Emma stand out is its focus on collaboration and brand consistency. Whether you’re working with clients or internal teams, Emma ensures everyone stays on brand without sacrificing creative freedom.
Emma isn’t trying to be everything. Instead, it’s doing one thing really well—email marketing that looks incredible, behaves smartly, and performs reliably.
Mailchimp is one of the most well-known email marketing platforms in the world. Founded in 2001, it’s often the first step for new marketers thanks to its free plan, intuitive drag-and-drop builder, and familiar brand reputation.
But over time, Mailchimp has morphed into more of a jack-of-all-trades marketing platform—offering email, landing pages, basic automation, social posting, and even a website builder.
It’s great for:
However, as your needs evolve—whether it’s more flexible automation, team collaboration, or true segmentation—Mailchimp often becomes too limiting. Advanced features are locked behind higher-tier plans, and platform rigidity can become frustrating for fast-growing brands.
Feature | Emma | Mailchimp |
---|---|---|
Ease of Use | Clean UI with strategic flexibility | Beginner-friendly but cluttered |
Design Freedom | Advanced branding tools + dynamic content | Limited customization on lower tiers |
Automation | Behavior-based flows with branching logic | Simple triggers with limited logic |
Segmentation | Deep and dynamic segmentation options | Basic filters and manual updates |
CRM | Basic tools with strong integrations | Audience tagging only |
Support | Award-winning live support + onboarding | Chat support on paid plans only |
Integrations | 100+ focused integrations | 250+ general integrations |
Best for | Growing teams & multi-brand management | Beginners & hobbyists |
Free Plan | No (but 14-day free trial) | Yes (with serious limitations) |
Automation is what separates casual email senders from strategic marketers. And this is where Emma quietly excels.
Emma’s automation builder allows you to create campaigns that react intelligently to user behavior, date-based triggers, and engagement history. It’s easy to set up flows that:
You’re not locked into rigid templates. Emma lets you build automation journeys with multiple steps, time delays, conditional splits, and more—all from an intuitive visual builder that’s easy to learn.
Mailchimp’s automation, especially on its free and Essentials plans, is much more limited. You can:
But if you want branching logic, multi-step flows, or conditional content, you’ll need to upgrade to the Standard or Premium plan—and even then, the automation builder is more linear and restrictive than Emma’s.
TL;DR: Emma gives you more automation power without making you pay premium-tier prices. Mailchimp is automation-light unless you’re ready to go all in.
Segmentation isn’t just a feature—it’s the heart of effective email marketing. The more targeted your emails are, the more they convert.
Emma’s segmentation engine is built for real-time, data-driven marketing. It lets you create smart segments based on:
And the best part? Emma’s segments auto-update. When a contact meets (or no longer meets) certain criteria, they move in and out of segments automatically—making your targeting sharper and more relevant with every campaign.
You can also:
Mailchimp, by contrast, operates on a list-based system, meaning contacts are tied to specific lists. You’ll often end up duplicating contacts across lists and paying twice. Segments can be created manually, but they don’t always update dynamically unless you’re on a higher-tier plan.
Its tag system is useful but not nearly as robust as Emma’s smart segments.
Big picture: If you care about growing a highly targeted, well-managed email audience, Emma gives you more control, more automation, and more personalization—right out of the box.
Not all email templates are created equal.
Emma’s design philosophy centers around your brand identity. Instead of offering cookie-cutter templates, Emma helps you craft emails that look and feel like your brand from top to bottom. You can upload your logo, set your brand colors and fonts, and apply them globally across templates and campaigns using Emma’s Brand Control tools.
Features that stand out:
With Emma, every email feels like it came from you, not just another marketer using the same template as everyone else.
Mailchimp, by comparison, gives you over 100 pre-built templates, but most of the more modern, mobile-responsive designs are locked behind Standard or Premium plans. Customization is possible—but it’s limited unless you’re familiar with HTML/CSS. Many users complain about outdated layouts and rigid styling on lower plans.
While Mailchimp is fine for basic campaigns, it lacks Emma’s depth in brand control and consistency, especially for users managing multiple brands or departments.
Both platforms offer drag-and-drop builders, but the difference lies in precision and flexibility.
Emma’s builder strikes a perfect balance between ease of use and design power. It offers:
The builder is highly intuitive, yet packed with the tools you need to create pixel-perfect emails that reflect your brand.
Mailchimp’s builder is also user-friendly but much more restrictive. You’re limited to predefined layouts unless you move up to the higher-tier plans. The WYSIWYG editor is clean, but customization options—especially for buttons, spacing, and mobile tweaks—can be frustratingly narrow.
Mailchimp’s AI-based suggestions are handy for subject lines and layouts, but they don’t come close to Emma’s dynamic design control.
Summary: Emma gives you creative control without overwhelming you. Mailchimp keeps it simple but at the cost of customization—unless you upgrade.
Email is just the beginning. Landing pages help convert subscribers into buyers, donors, or leads.
Emma offers landing page creation through its integrations (like with Campaign Monitor or Unbounce), or as part of custom add-ons depending on your account level. While it doesn’t include an in-app landing page builder by default, the integrations are smooth and allow you to carry over branding and audience segmentation from your email campaigns seamlessly.
The power of Emma’s segmentation and branding flows into your landing page strategy—especially when paired with dynamic content and advanced audience filtering.
Mailchimp, meanwhile, includes a basic landing page builder on every plan. It’s great for creating quick sign-up pages, product highlights, or limited-time offers. You can:
However, Mailchimp’s landing pages lack deeper personalization, conditional content, or the ability to connect seamlessly to automated email flows unless you’re using Standard or higher tiers.
In short: Mailchimp makes landing pages easy. But Emma makes them strategic, especially when integrated with third-party tools and real-time data segmentation.
Analytics isn’t just about numbers—it’s about knowing what to do next.
Emma provides rich performance insights on every campaign, including:
One standout feature? Emma allows you to export beautiful, client-ready PDF reports. Perfect for agencies or internal teams reporting to leadership.
More advanced plans unlock:
Mailchimp also offers solid analytics on all paid plans, including:
However, many of Mailchimp’s advanced metrics are buried or require integrations. And the reporting UI has been criticized as cluttered and sometimes inconsistent.
TL;DR: If you’re reporting to stakeholders, Emma’s elegant, client-ready reports are a major advantage. Mailchimp covers the basics, but Emma gives you strategic clarity.
Forms are the first handshake. And Emma makes sure that first impression counts.
Emma allows you to create and embed forms directly within your campaigns or on your site. You can:
Forms in Emma are tightly integrated with your contact database and automation workflows, meaning your leads never fall through the cracks.
Mailchimp’s forms, while easy to use, are pretty basic. You can create:
You can also enable GDPR fields and auto-tag users. But Mailchimp doesn’t allow for complex branching logic, custom confirmation pages, or deep field-level tracking unless you’re on the Standard plan or higher.
For capturing leads in a personalized, branded, and automated way, Emma takes the edge.
Here’s the deal—Mailchimp is not a CRM, and they even admit it.
Mailchimp offers audience management features like tagging, segmenting, and behavior tracking. But it lacks pipelines, lead scoring, task automation, or deal tracking. You can manually tag users or use pre-built journeys, but it doesn’t support sales processes in any meaningful way.
Emma doesn’t market itself as a full CRM, but it offers:
With Emma, you get CRM-lite capabilities out of the box—and the ability to scale up through integrations when needed.
Verdict: Emma offers more out-of-the-box intelligence and better CRM interoperability. Mailchimp simply isn’t built for that use case.
Emma integrates with 100+ essential tools, including:
While the list isn’t huge, Emma focuses on deep, meaningful integrations that preserve branding and contact data integrity. If you’re using Emma + Salesforce or Emma + Eventbrite, the connection feels seamless.
Mailchimp, on the other hand, offers over 250 integrations through its marketplace, covering a wide range of tools from e-commerce to scheduling apps. Some require third-party plugins, and depth can vary.
But remember: quantity doesn’t always mean quality. Many Mailchimp integrations are surface-level, with limited data mapping or automation triggers.
Choose Emma if you value smart, streamlined integrations that power workflows. Choose Mailchimp if you need a wide net and don’t mind piecing things together.
Deliverability is often overlooked—but it shouldn’t be.
Emma consistently ranks high in independent deliverability tests. It maintains strong relationships with ISPs and focuses on authenticated email practices like:
Real-world users report reliable inbox placement, even in tricky verticals like education and nonprofit.
Mailchimp, with its massive user base, sometimes struggles. Shared IPs and high-volume spam reports from free users can affect sender reputation. While Mailchimp does a decent job at getting into inboxes, it’s not as consistent, especially at scale.
Email that doesn’t get delivered doesn’t matter. Emma helps ensure that what you send gets seen.
Let’s compare pricing without the fine print:
Emma offers custom pricing based on list size and features. While it may seem expensive upfront, that base includes:
Emma also offers volume discounts and multi-account plans for agencies or institutions.
Plan | Price (0–500 contacts) | Email Sends | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Free | $0/month | 1,000/month | No automation, limited templates |
Essentials | $13/month | 5,000/month | Basic templates & support |
Standard | $20/month | 6,000/month | Unlocks automation & better segmentation |
Premium | $350/month | 150,000+/month | For large teams, includes phone support |
Mailchimp looks cheaper—until you realize you’re paying per duplicate contact and features like multivariate testing and dynamic content are locked behind high-tier plans.
TL;DR: Emma costs more upfront, but includes everything premium with no tiers or contact duplication penalties.
Here’s what we’ve heard directly from brands that made the move:
“Mailchimp was too limiting. We couldn’t scale automations across departments.”
— University Communications Manager
“Our emails looked… generic. Emma gave us the polish we were missing.”
— Creative Director at a nonprofit
“With Emma, our campaigns feel smart, timely, and personal. Mailchimp felt like a blast.”
— Marketing Manager at a SaaS startup
And when multi-brand organizations switch, they consistently report:
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ “Emma is the most intuitive email tool I’ve used—and the reports are beautiful.”
— G2 User
⭐⭐⭐⭐ “Mailchimp is great if you’re just getting started, but I hit limits fast.”
— Capterra Reviewer
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ “I manage multiple brands. Emma’s sub-account system saved my life.”
— TrustRadius Verified Reviewer
What is Emma best used for?
Emma is best for growing teams, multi-location brands, universities, nonprofits, and agencies that want custom branding, flexible segmentation, and collaborative tools for smarter email marketing.
Can I migrate from Mailchimp to Emma easily?
Yes! Emma offers white-glove migration support, helping you import contacts, set up automations, and recreate templates.
Does Emma offer a free plan?
No, but Emma offers a 14-day free trial with full feature access—no credit card needed.
Is Emma good for e-commerce?
Emma supports e-commerce use cases through integrations like Shopify, WooCommerce, and Square—making it easy to send product-based campaigns and abandoned cart flows.
How does Mailchimp compare to Emma in long-term value?
While Mailchimp is cheaper upfront, Emma delivers more depth, smarter branding tools, and better support—making it ideal for serious marketers and teams ready to grow.