Importing Canva Designs with Links

SOLVED
Go to solution
DonnaA793
Rookie

Hi folks!

 

This may be a silly question to all you CC pros out there, but I want to create a Canva document with links and then import it to Constant Contact, so it can be emailed to my list.  How do I get the links to work?  Is a pdf or jpeg document better to use, and can I have more than one link in the document?

 

Thanks!!

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION
William_A
Administrator
0 Votes

Hello @DonnaA793 ,

 

Ultimately, PDFs can't be embedded into emails sent through us, so any links wouldn't be accessible from the email itself. Images can only have one link applied to them, so (for example) when you make an email from a PDF conversion, the image that's generated of the first page will be setup to automatically link to the associated PDF. Since click tracking rewrites can't be applied to external pages, there won't be any click reporting to gain from links within the actual document.

 

Generally speaking, Canva is best used to make standalone images that can be inserted via the email builder, or be linked to as fuller PDFs you host in your Constant Contact library or a cloud drive. You can obviously include as many links as you'd like in the PDF.

 

See also:

Inserting text links

Inserting image links

Inserting button links

Avoiding image-only emails


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
William A
Community & Social Media Support

View solution in original post

1 REPLY 1
William_A
Administrator
0 Votes

Hello @DonnaA793 ,

 

Ultimately, PDFs can't be embedded into emails sent through us, so any links wouldn't be accessible from the email itself. Images can only have one link applied to them, so (for example) when you make an email from a PDF conversion, the image that's generated of the first page will be setup to automatically link to the associated PDF. Since click tracking rewrites can't be applied to external pages, there won't be any click reporting to gain from links within the actual document.

 

Generally speaking, Canva is best used to make standalone images that can be inserted via the email builder, or be linked to as fuller PDFs you host in your Constant Contact library or a cloud drive. You can obviously include as many links as you'd like in the PDF.

 

See also:

Inserting text links

Inserting image links

Inserting button links

Avoiding image-only emails


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
William A
Community & Social Media Support
  • Avatar

    Featured Article

    Use Sections to Build Email Campaigns Faster and Improve Engagement Rates

    Using Sections while designing your marketing email not only increases your own efficiency but helps you to deliver a more friendly, organized message. Check out some of the key benefits of using sections in email.

    See Article
  • Avatar

    Featured Thread

    Casual Conversations: What's your go-to playlist?

    If you listen to music while you work, share your playlist below so we can be inspired and maybe find some new music!

    View thread
  • Avatar

    Featured Thread

    Ready, Set, Send Reflections

    The Ready, Set, Send Challenge has finished! Let's reflect on the wins and accomplishments over the last six weeks.

    Join challenge
Updates
Just Getting Started?

We’re here to help you grow. With how-to tutorials, courses, getting-started guides, videos and step-by-step instructions to start and succeed with Constant Contact.

Start Here

73% of SMBs express doubt that their marketing strategy is effective. Does this sound familiar? Read our Small Business Now Report to learn how you can tweak your strategy to see better results.

Go read our article
Upcoming Webinars
NOV 14
'Tis the Season for Last-Minute Holiday Marketing
2PM - 3PM EST