During the November 2025 marketing review, BluePoint ATM and the Asymmetric team identified an open question around the optimal method for delivering collateral (one-pagers, spec sheets) to prospects via email. The core tension: email attachments are immediately accessible but feel bulky and can trigger spam filters, while links drive website traffic and enable more granular tracking but may feel suspicious to cold prospects.
A decision was made to research best practices and, if data is inconclusive, run an A/B test to determine which delivery method produces better open and click-through rates for BluePoint's outbound sequences.
See also: [1] | [2]
Should one-pagers and collateral be sent as email attachments or as links (hosted on the domain or in HubSpot)?
Both approaches have merit depending on the audience and relationship stage. BluePoint's outbound sequences target cold-to-warm prospects, which adds complexity — link-averse recipients may distrust URLs from unfamiliar senders, while attachment-averse recipients may skip bulky emails entirely.
Assets uploaded to HubSpot Files can be linked directly in email sends. When a contact clicks and downloads, the event is logged to their contact record, enabling:
- Visibility into which prospects engaged with which collateral
- Segmentation and follow-up triggers based on download behavior
- Attribution of asset engagement to specific email campaigns
This is distinct from a domain-hosted PDF, which would require UTM parameters or QR codes for equivalent tracking.
A parallel discussion surfaced around direct mail QR codes. BluePoint expressed interest in assigning a unique QR code per mailer piece so that individual recipient intent could be tracked (e.g., if a specific address visits the site five times, that signals high purchase intent).
Feasibility notes:
- Generating unique QR codes per piece is technically possible but operationally intensive — potentially thousands of unique links per mail run
- Cost depends on the printing plate used; black-plate-only QR codes (matching the existing variable-data black printing used for recipient names) would be the most cost-effective path
- Melissa Cusumano to obtain a cost estimate from the printer
Current QR codes on one-pagers support source-level tracking (e.g., "came from Buyer's Edge spec sheet") but not individual-recipient-level tracking.
| Action | Owner | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Research industry best practices: attachment vs. link open/click rates | Melissa Cusumano | Pending |
| Consult Chuck (Sales Growth MD) on asset delivery best practices for outbound | Wade Zirkle | Pending |
| Get cost estimate for unique-per-piece QR codes on direct mailers (black plate) | Melissa Cusumano | Pending |
| Design A/B test in HubSpot if research is inconclusive | Melissa Cusumano | Pending |
| Upload approved one-pagers to HubSpot Files for link-based delivery | Melissa Cusumano | Pending |
This question — attachment vs. link — is a recurring decision point for clients running outbound email sequences with collateral. The right answer typically depends on:
A/B testing within HubSpot is the most reliable way to get client-specific data rather than relying on general benchmarks.