Registration and attendance are two different battles
People register for webinars to learn one specific thing. They attend — or don't — based on whether you keep that promise top of mind between sign-up and start time. Industry attendance rates hover around 40-50% of registrants, which means half your subject-line work happens after someone has already said yes. Treat the reminder emails as seriously as the invite, because that's where the no-shows are won or lost.
Subject lines that earn the registration
Name the single takeaway
Don't promise a broad topic; promise one concrete outcome. 'the 3 cold-email templates that booked us 40 meetings' beats 'a webinar on outbound sales.' The reader is buying a specific skill, not a time slot.
Lead with the expert
If you have a recognizable speaker, they are the hook. 'the head of growth at Notion, live' converts on authority alone. Borrow credibility wherever you legitimately can.
Make the format feel light
'20 minutes, no slides, just the playbook' lowers the perceived cost of attending. People protect their calendars; signal that this won't eat their afternoon.
Subject lines that get registrants to actually show up
The day-before reminder
Re-sell the value, don't just restate the logistics. 'tomorrow: the funnel teardown you signed up for' reminds them why they cared.
The hour-before nudge
Immediacy and ease. 'we start in an hour — here's your link' removes every barrier to clicking in. Put the join link right in reach.
The 'starting now' ping
'we're live — come in' sent at start time recaptures the distracted. A meaningful share of attendance comes from this single email.
Don't forget the replay
Half your registrants won't make it live, and the replay email is a second conversion shot that most teams under-invest in. 'the recording (plus the slide everyone asked for)' or 'missed it? the 20-minute version is inside' re-engage the no-shows. The replay sequence often drives as many conversions as the live event itself.
What to avoid
- Promising a vague topic instead of a specific, nameable takeaway
- Treating reminder emails as an afterthought — that's where no-shows are lost
- Burying the join link in the hour-before email
- Skipping the replay sequence — it's a second conversion you already paid for
- Over-formal subject lines that read like a calendar system, not a person