Overview #
Huski Send gives WordPress administrators a simple way to send rich-text emails from the dashboard. Instead of copying user emails into a separate email tool, you can choose specific users or entire user roles, write a formatted message, review everything, and send it directly from WordPress.
It is built for admin-managed communication. That means it is best used for practical site messages, member updates, internal notices, announcements, and other situations where you need to reach people who already have user accounts on the site.
Where to Find It #
In the WordPress dashboard, look for Send Message in the left-hand admin menu.
What You Can Do #
- Send to specific users: Choose individual WordPress users from a searchable list.
- Send to roles: Send a message to everyone in one or more selected roles.
- Filter the user list: Narrow users by role or by a chosen user meta value.
- Write rich-text emails: Use the WordPress editor to add formatted text, links, lists, and basic layout.
- Review before sending: Confirm recipients, subject, and message before the email goes out.
- View recent history: Review a read-only log of recently sent messages.
- Configure settings: Choose the user meta key used for filtering and add the license key for updates.
Basic Workflow #
- Open Send Message.
- Choose whether to send to specific users or user roles.
- Select your recipients.
- Write the subject and message.
- Review the recipients and message preview.
- Click Send Email.
- Check Message History if you need to confirm what was sent recently.
Good Uses for Huski Send #
- Sending updates to members.
- Sending admin-managed announcements to specific user groups.
- Contacting users in a certain role.
- Sending district, department, or region-based messages when user meta filtering is configured.
- Keeping a short recent record of sent messages.
Important Notes #
Huski Send uses WordPress email sending through wp_mail(). That means delivery depends on your site’s email setup. If emails are not arriving reliably, the plugin may not be the problem. Your site may need SMTP or another transactional email service.
Only administrators with the right permissions can access and send messages. The plugin is not intended as a public email marketing platform.
Troubleshooting #
- I do not see Send Message: Make sure the plugin is active and that your account has administrator access.
- No emails are sent: Make sure recipients, subject, and message body are all filled in.
- Emails say they sent but do not arrive: Check your WordPress email delivery setup.
- I see a license notice: Add the license key under Send Message > Settings.
