Ask Before You "Blast"
The Importance of Permission
Be honest. Whenever you get email marketing that you weren't
expecting, or that you never even requested, what do you do (after
cursing the name of the person who sent it)? You click that "this is
spam" button in your email program. Heck, according to some studies,
30% of recipients click "this is spam" for email marketing campaigns,
even if they specifically requested it from the sender!
So
what's the big deal? Some really scary stuff happens behind the scenes
whenever someone clicks that spam button. First, a message is sent to
their ISP (like AOL, MSN, Hotmail, Earthlink, Yahoo, Juno, NetZero,
etc.). That message says "I think these guys are spamming me." Then
their ISP starts watching you, because you've aroused their suspicions.
If enough people on their network report your email as spam to them,
they'll block all future emails from you. How many abuse reports are
enough to get you "blacklisted"? ISPs all have different thresholds,
but 0.01% is the number that's most often discussed by people in the
email deliverability business.
It's even worse than you think. Some ISPs don't even require a human
to report your email to them. Some of them will block your emails if
automatic spam filters think your messages are "spammy" for whatever
reason (like using red fonts, or the phrase, "click here!"). Some ISPs
use firewalls that can read reported spam, and blacklist URLs that are
in the content (so not only will your company's email server get
blocked, but so could ALL emails that have ANY links related to your
company). And ISPs and anti-spam services often share their records
with each other. Finally, once you get blacklisted, it almost takes a
miracle to get de-listed. That's because most blacklists are run in
secrecy. If you want to contact the owners, you usually have to post
messages on public anti-spam forums, and hope they're lurking. Then,
pray they take you off the list (after a thorough verbal-flogging by
the other members of the forum, of course). Send one bad campaign, and
your email marketing efforts could be compromised for a very, very long
time. Yikes.
So what can you do?
If even a handful of spam complaints can cause serious
deliverability issues for your company, what can you do to avoid them?
Here's a list:
- Never, under any circumstances, send email marketing to anyone that
hasn't requested them from you. Got a list of prospects (customers,
friends, family who've done business with you)? Send them an invitation
to join your email marketing list. Don't just start sending them email
newsletters or promotions.
- Never, ever, ever send email marketing to a purchased list,
to emails you "scraped" from websites, or to a list of people you just
assume would want to hear from you (even if they're in your industry,
or co-members of some trade association). You might not piss them all
off, but a tiny handful is all it takes to get yourself blacklisted. At
i-Emailer, we've had to shut down the accounts of countless real estate
agents, trade show vendors, photographers, and one Alpaca farmer for
violating this rule.
- When people sign up for your email list, use the double
opt-in method. Basically, when they submit your opt-in form, they'll
receive an email with a "Please click to confirm that you want to
receive emails from me" link in it. Using this method, people will only
be added to your list if they truly want to hear from you.
- All throughout your opt-in confirmation process, ask
subscribers to add your email address to their contacts list or address
book. This will "white list" your emails, so they won't get
accidentally blocked (or reported as spam) in the future.
- If you have an old list, you should ask for permission again.
If you haven't been in contact with them within the last 6 months or
so, chances are extremely high that they've forgotten who you are, let
alone signing up for your list. Instead of sending them a full blown
email promotion or newsletter, send a very brief, "Hey, remember us?
Still want emails from us?" reminder email.
Before you click that "Send" button, you should ask yourself, "Did
every recipient on this list give me permission to send them email
marketing?" If your answer is anything less than a confident "YES!" you shouldn't send that campaign.
Other Useful Resources:
- Free Email Marketing Guide
- Inbox Inspector:
Generate screenshots of your email designs in all the major email
programs, test all the major spam filters and email firewalls, and scan
for spammy keywords in one click.
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