If you write emails for a living or even just send newsletters, you have likely felt this frustration.
You write a solid email.
The content is useful.
The offer is clear.
And yet, open rates barely move.
We have been there too. What changed our results was not sending more emails or adding clever symbols. It was learning how to open a curiosity loop the brain wants to close, and doing it in a way that builds trust rather than eroding it.
This article explains how that works and how to apply it correctly.
Why Some Subject Lines Feel Impossible to Ignore
Some subject lines create a quiet pull. You do not feel pressured. You just feel unfinished.
That reaction is not accidental. It is psychological.
When a subject line presents an incomplete idea, the brain treats it like unfinished business. The fastest way to resolve that tension is to open the email.
This effect is driven by the Zeigarnik Effect, a well-known principle in psychology. It explains why open loops work when used properly and why they fail when abused.
What Is the Open Loop Technique?
An open loop is a message that is intentionally left incomplete.
In email subject lines, it works by:
- Revealing part of an idea
- Withholding the resolution
- Making the resolution available only inside the email
You are not teasing randomly. You are creating a specific gap that the reader wants to close.
Our core rule is simple: If the loop opens in the subject line, it must close inside the email. Anything else damages trust.
The Psychology Behind Open Loops: The Zeigarnik Effect
The Zeigarnik Effect describes how people remember unfinished tasks better than completed ones.
This is why:
- Cliffhangers are effective
- Unanswered questions linger
- Incomplete stories feel uncomfortable
The brain naturally seeks closure.
A strong open-loop subject line creates:
- Mild mental tension
- Clear relevance to the reader
- An obvious path to resolution is to open the email
Clicking feels less like effort and more like finishing something that was left open.
Why Most “Curiosity” Subject Lines Fail
Not all curiosity drives action. In fact, poorly executed curiosity often lowers engagement over time.
From reviewing hundreds of email campaigns, we consistently see the same issues. Many subject lines try to spark interest but fail to give the brain enough structure to care.
Most underperforming curiosity subject lines:
- Are too vague, offering no clear idea of what the email is about
- Promise intrigue without payoff, which erodes trust after repeated sends
- Open loops that cannot be closed, leaving readers feeling misled
Common examples include:
- “You won’t believe this.”
- “This changes everything.”
- “Big update inside”
These lines create uncertainty rather than meaningful curiosity. Over time, they condition readers to skip your emails altogether.
Anatomy of a High-Performing Open Loop Subject Line
High-performing open loops are not accidental. They follow a simple structure that balances clarity with curiosity.
A Clear But Incomplete Idea
The reader should immediately understand the topic, but not the conclusion. This creates curiosity without confusion.
Weak example:
“Something important you need to know”
Stronger example:
“This one line cut our open rates in half.”
Clarity creates tension. Vagueness removes it.
A Reason the Reader Needs Closure
The open loop must feel personally relevant. If the reader does not see a clear benefit, the loop will not hold.
Ask yourself:
- Does this affect their results?
- Does it save or cost them time?
- Does it impact revenue or performance?
Without a meaningful stake, there is no reason to click.
One Obvious Path to Resolution
The email itself should feel like the only way to close the loop.
Avoid:
- Explaining the answer in the preview text
- Overloading the subject line with unnecessary detail
The subject line opens the loop. The email closes it.
Proven Open Loop Subject Line Frameworks
These frameworks are built on how people naturally process information. We use them consistently because they create curiosity without sounding exaggerated or manipulative.
The “Almost Finished” Loop
This framework suggests progress, then withholds the final step.
Examples:
- “We fixed the funnel, except this one page.”
- “Everything worked until this part.”
Why it works:
The brain wants to complete tasks that feel nearly finished.
The “Missing Piece” Loop
This approach implies the reader is close to the solution but missing something important.
Examples:
- “Your emails are good. They are missing this.”
- “Most newsletters fail here.”
Why it works:
People are motivated to correct small gaps in their understanding.
The “Unexpected Outcome” Loop
This framework introduces a result that contradicts expectations.
Examples:
- “Our best email broke a rule.”
- “This advice lowered conversions.”
Why it works:
When expectations are challenged, the brain looks for an explanation.
The “Quiet Warning” Loop
This method signals risk without using fear-based language.
Examples:
- “This looks fine until it is not.”
- “One line that quietly costs clicks.”
Why it works:
It triggers curiosity driven by prevention rather than panic.
Open Loops vs. Clickbait: Where the Line Is
Understanding the difference between open loops and clickbait is essential for protecting long-term trust, especially in professional or medical marketing.
Ethical open loops:
- Deliver exactly what the subject line promises
- Respect the reader’s time and attention
- Build credibility and consistency over repeated sends
Clickbait loops:
- Overpromise without real substance
- Delay or avoid the actual payoff
- Rely on emotion rather than useful information
Our internal rule is simple. If a reader finishes the email feeling informed rather than misled, the loop was ethical.
How to Close the Loop Inside the Email
Opening a strong subject line is only half the work. Many campaigns fail because they never properly close the loop inside the email.
From our experience, effective emails:
- Close the loop early, usually in the first paragraph, so readers get immediate value
- State the answer or insight clearly, without forcing readers to search for it
- Introduce a second loop only after the first is resolved, to maintain momentum without frustration
Closing the loop builds trust. Over time, that trust leads to higher and more consistent open rates.
Real-World Examples: Before and After
To understand the impact of open loops, we tested different subject lines on the same email list, using the same sender name, timing, and email content. The only variable changed was the subject line.
| Flat Subject Line | Open Loop Version |
|---|---|
| Email Writing Tips | This one line changed our opens |
| Weekly Newsletter #42 | We almost did not send this |
| Marketing Update | This metric surprised us |
Same audience.
Same sender.
Different framing.
The open-loop versions consistently earned higher open rates because they created a clear curiosity gap that could only be resolved by opening the email.
When NOT to Use Open Loops
Open loops are powerful, but they are not appropriate in every situation.
Avoid using them when:
- Sending transactional or confirmation emails, such as bookings, receipts, or appointment reminders
- Sharing sensitive, medical, or compliance-related information, where clarity and accuracy matter most
- Delivering urgent instructions, where delays or confusion could cause issues
- Absolute clarity is required, and the reader should understand the message instantly
In these situations, direct and descriptive subject lines consistently outperform curiosity-based ones.
Final Takeaway: Curiosity Is a Tool, Not a Trick
Open loops work because they align with how the brain seeks completion, not because they manipulate. When done well, they feel clear, professional, and respectful. These qualities matter in medspa marketing.
From our experience, results improve when the loop is specific, the payoff is delivered early, and the reader feels respected.
This is where we helps clinics use curiosity ethically, protect trust, and improve email open rates without relying on hype, pressure, or discounts.
Anticipation, built correctly, becomes a long-term asset.