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The decades-old technology had stagnated for many years—until the coronavirus pandemic pushed startups to try new things.

Why we’re entering the golden age of email

[Source image: Алексей Белозерский/iStock]

BY Dvir Ben-Aroya4 minute read

We all know that email is where your work happens. But given your inbox’s role as the central hub of your professional life, email has largely failed to become a more effective communication tool—until recently.

Part of the reason why email has stagnated is that its one of the oldest digital technologies still being used daily. The first “email” was sent on October 29, 1969, and we’re still sending them in 2020. Some of the underlying technologies have certainly evolved since that first email, but most of the protocols being used are from the previous century. SMTP (sending email) was created in 1982. IMAP (downloading email) was created in 1986. If you think about all that’s changed with technology since the 1980s, it’s baffling to think that we’re still so reliant on protocols that are so old.

Because email is built on open standards, it has remained decentralized. Unlike many other types of tech these days, that means that no single company can own and control it. Anyone can start a company that provides an email service, and they will be compatible with all of the other email platforms on the market. If email were built on a closed system, it would likely be controlled by a handful of big technology companies—just like some of the newer modes of communication.

But there’s a downside to email’s open nature. For the past two decades, email hasn’t gotten much attention or financial investment. During the early 2000s, the most significant innovation was Google offering one gigabyte of storage. Since then, what was the last considerable innovation we’ve seen in email? If you can’t think of anything, it’s because there hasn’t been much. It’s because even though anyone can start an email service, Big Tech—primarily Google, Microsoft, and Apple—still controls the vast majority of active email accounts.

Since every device included a “good enough” email account and email accounts were given away like candy at Halloween, there wasn’t much of a market for anyone to come along with any exciting (and paid) solution. Apps like Mailbox and Sparrow offered some new UI tricks, but they had no viable business models and couldn’t convince many people to pay for an app subscription. There was little incentive for anyone to innovate.

In addition, email’s open nature has turned into a paradox, where it’s nearly impossible to modernize it without virtually every email provider agreeing on the change. This stalemate led to the development of a host of new services designed to streamline communications. Companies needed new solutions, so they built their own. During the rise of the app economy, services like WhatsApp were designed to eliminate SMS fees for sending short messages. Slack and Microsoft Teams were created to help solve endless email threads. While all of these new services are fun and exciting, they’re all built on closed platforms.

There’s certainly a place for messaging, but email is still the centralized communication portfolio for many things that happen in our work and personal lives. When you want to reach out to a new client, you’ll use email. When you need to file your month-end expenses, you’ll find those receipts in your email. Email is still the focal point for containing our digital memories and footprint; and for most of our outbound, cross-organization communications.

However, in 2020, we’ve all been thrown into a tailspin, thanks to a global pandemic. We’ve become ever more reliant on technology to keep our organizations and our work moving forward. As much as people have tried to get away from email, they’ve realized it’s still the most efficient way to communicate. People have realized that they still need and use email daily even with new tools like Microsoft Teams and Slack, especially as entire companies have transitioned to remote work. And if they’re still going to need email, then all of these chat-based tools are just another inbox to check and manage. It’s created a message overload. We end up with more platforms or apps to manage, more distractions, and more time wasted chasing down bits of info and tasks spread across a multitude of services.

That’s why email must evolve into something more up-to-date and more streamlined. The constant stress of jumping between chat apps, project management apps, shared docs, and even your calendar is taking its toll. What we need is a solution that enhances the way we communicate and collaborate rather than hinders it, a solution that reimagines what email would look like if it was built today.

It’s clear that we need to redesign email from the ground up and simplify the way people communicate with each other now—not in 1969. We need to rethink our communications from a 21st century perspective. We need solutions that are as powerful as they are simple—but the bottom line is, we need email.

That’s probably why we’ve started to see a lot of news about email.  Countless new products associated with email launched in 2020. Hey, from the creators of Basecamp, launched in June to much excitement. OnMail, a new email service from the creators of the Edison email app, was announced in April and launched a few weeks ago. Readdle, the creators of Spark, have continued to pour energy and investment into their app. With such investments in new email apps and services, it’s clear that email is becoming the darling of Silicon Valley again. There has been more innovation in email in the past two years than in the past 10.

When our world turned upside in 2020, we retreated to the tools we know and trust. Everyone is realizing what I’ve known for a long time—email is finally sexy again.


Dvir Ben-Aroya is the cofounder and CEO of Spike, a platform that combines emails, chats, calls, collaborative docs, and tasks. He has over 20 years of executive experience leading technology and internet companies.

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