People who deal with tons of emails on a daily basis would understand how important it is for (encrypted) emails to reach the correct recipient and have them read it. For business email clients, there are âread receiptsâ where you will know if the receiver has opened the email you sent them.
Read receipts have not been implemented natively on Gmail, but hereâs a Chrome extension that you can use just for that.
Signals is an extension that allows you to track who has read your sent email on Gmail. It also has a very clean interface. Letâs see how Signals can work for you.
Recommended Reading: 10 Ways To Tighten Up Your Gmail Security
Get Notified On Who Has Read Your Mail
To begin, download and install the Signals Chrome extension. A Signals icon button will be shown at the end of the browserâs address bar â" this is where all your notifications will be shown.
Now, head to app.getsignals.com/install/google to connect your Gmail account. Sign in and youâre ready to start getting notifications.
To begin tracking, go to Gmail and compose a new email. Youâll notice a new Signals button at the bottom of the compose box that allows you to track the email. Check that box and click on Send to track your email.
Once a user opens the email, a notification will appear on the Signals icon. You can then click on it to view details like when did the user open it, the location it was opened from and how many times it has been viewed. You can also click on a particular notification to view the entire email on Gmail.
Thatâs all there is to it, Signals is very easy to set up and is free for up to 200 notifications a month. Thatâs plenty since you donât have to track every single email you send out. However, if youâre working with a team and need to track lots of mail, thereâs a premium version with no limitations for $10/month.
Weâve featured a similar service before called RightInbox, but Signals is better as it keeps your Inbox clean and instead gives you notifications of your opened mail. At the time of this writing, Signals only works with Google Chrome, but a Firefox Beta is in the works.
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