What Makes a Great Missionary Email
Your weekly email is more than an update — it's how the people who love you get to experience your mission alongside you. Here's how to make it count.
Every week, dozens of people open your email hoping to feel a little closer to you. They want to know: What is it really like for you right now? What are you seeing, feeling, learning? Who are the people in your life? How is your faith growing?
The best missionary emails answer those questions. They don't just report what happened — they bring the reader into the experience. And the good news is that this is a skill anyone can develop.
Why Pday Exists #
Here's the truth: a lot of missionaries don't want to write their weekly email. They don't know what to say, they feel like they're repeating themselves, or they wonder if anyone even reads it. On the other side, families and friends are refreshing their inbox every Monday hoping for something — anything — that helps them feel connected.
Pday exists to bridge that gap. It gives missionaries a clear, simple framework for what to write so they're never staring at a blank screen. And it turns their emails into something meaningful — scored, highlighted, and presented in a way that helps everyone feel closer. The result: missionaries do a better job documenting their mission, and the people who care about them actually get to experience it alongside them.
Pday evaluates your emails around three simple goals. Here's what each one means and how to improve.
The Three Goals #
Experiences Share What Happened
What happened this week?
Your readers want to know what your life is actually like. Share a story, an activity, a funny moment, or even just what your typical day looks like. It doesn't have to be dramatic — the everyday stuff is often what people love most. Pick something that happened and tell us about it.
People Mention Someone by Name
Who are the people in your life right now?
Your mission is built on people — your companion, the people you're teaching, members who help out. When you write "we taught a family," nobody can hold onto that. When you write "we taught the Ramirez family," suddenly they're real. Use names. Your readers will start caring about the same people you care about, and they'll ask about them by name.
Testimony Share Something Spiritual
What are you learning spiritually?
The people reading your email want to hear your testimony — not a Sunday School answer, but what you're actually experiencing. What scriptures are hitting differently now? What have you learned about prayer? Where have you seen the Lord's hand? Even one sentence about what you believe or what you're learning counts. It's also okay to share hard weeks — how your faith carries you through is powerful testimony.
Practical Tips #
Start with a moment, not a summary
Instead of opening with "This week was good," try opening with a specific scene: "There's a dog on our street that waits for us every morning..." or "Elder Johnson and I got completely lost on Tuesday and ended up at..." You'll hook your reader immediately and the rest of the email will flow from there.
Write to one person
It's hard to write a good email to "everyone." Pick one person — your mom, your best friend, your little sibling — and write as if you're talking to them. The email will feel more natural and personal, even though lots of people will read it.
Share what you're learning, not just what you're doing
Activities are the skeleton of your email, but insights are the soul. "We taught three lessons" is an activity. "I'm learning that people can feel when you actually care about them versus when you're just trying to hit a number" is an insight. Both can go in the same email — but the insight is what people will remember.
It's okay to be honest about hard things
You don't need to share every struggle in a broadcast email — some things are better saved for a personal call or a letter to your parents. But acknowledging that not every day is easy, and sharing how you're working through it, makes your email real. Your readers aren't expecting perfection. They're expecting you.
End with testimony
You don't need a formal testimony every week, but closing with something you believe — even one sentence — ties the whole email together. It reminds your reader (and you) why you're out there.
Rate Your Last Email #
Quick self-check
Think about the last email you (or your missionary) sent. Check everything that applies.
How Pday Scores Your Emails #
Pday scores each weekly email on four dimensions, each worth up to 25 points: Experiences (sharing what happened this week), People (mentioning real people by name), Testimony (sharing something spiritual), and Effort (how much you wrote and whether you included photos). The total adds up to 100.
The first three are evaluated simply: did you do it? If you mentioned people by name — even briefly — you get solid credit. If you did it really well, you get full marks. The effort score is automatic — it rewards you for writing a substantial email and attaching a few photos.
Along with the score, you'll get a personalized tip that celebrates something specific from your email. If one of the three content goals is missing, you'll get a plain, actionable suggestion — like "mention someone by name" or "share one thing you learned spiritually." No vague writing-class advice.
The scoring follows school-grade intuition — 90+ is an A, 80s is a B. A missionary who covers all three topics and writes a decent-length email with photos is already in the 80s.
- 90–100 — Master Correspondent. Exceptional. All three goals done well with real effort.
- 80–89 — Seasoned Writer. Solid across the board. A great weekly update.
- 70–79 — Finding Their Voice. Good effort, with room to grow in one area.
- 55–69 — Getting Started. The basics are there. A little more depth will help.
- 0–54 — Room to Grow. A short or surface-level email. That's okay — every writer starts somewhere.
The most important thing isn't the number. It's the habit of sitting down each week and really thinking about what you want the people at home to know — and then writing it in a way that lets them experience it with you.