How to Improve Your
Email Deliverability Rates
Written by Mitchell Harper, Interspire Co-founder
Published on 23rd May 2007
Introduction
Last week Eddie and Rodney were
attempting to
send an email to a Hotmail account we've setup to make
sure our
emails get to the intended recipients without any
problems.
Our mail server was reporting that the
emails
were being delivered, however we couldn't see them in
our Hotmail account. The emails weren't bouncing back and they weren't
appearing in the
junk mail folder. Puzzling to say the
least.
If you've ever been in a situation like
this
with one of the big email providers including Hotmail,
GMail,
Yahoo and AOL then you know it's frustrating and
confusing to
those of us who send emails
regularly.
We have over 95,000 people on our mailing
list
and after a quick look at the list I noticed a large
majority of
our subscribers use one of the big email providers
mentioned
above. If our newsletter failed to get into the inbox of
all of
these people we'd probably only reach 10,000 - 20,000
subscribers (between 10% and 20% of our total
subscribers);
hardly what we want.
Getting Your Email There on
Time
What would be some of the reasons why
your
email might not reach the intended recipient? The first
problem
are you subscribers, believe it or
not.
How many times have you personally signed
up
for a mailing list (even using double opt-in) and then
clicked
the "Mark as Spam" button in your email client because
you
couldn't remember when you in-fact did sign up? I know
I've done
this on many occasions.
This hurts companies who send legitimate
emails, because if enough recipients mark their emails
as spam,
the big email providers take notice and ban their mail
server.
This process is called black listing and once
your mail
server's black listed it's extremely difficult to get
off the
list. More on that later.
Next up there's the spam algorithms and
other
checks that mail servers employ. AOL for example used to
implement a technique called rate limiting
whereby they
would only accept a certain amount of emails from a mail
server
at a time - send more than you're allowed to and you're
considered a spammer and were black
listed.
All of the big email providers have their
own
proprietary algorithms for checking and deal with email
spam.
The good news is that a lot of the things the algorithms
check
for are easy to avoid.
Take a look an article Eddie wrote called
"Avoiding
the Spam Filters and Other Email Marketing Tips".
Follow the
steps he talks about in the article and you'll improve
the
chance of your email getting through
significantly.
More Ways to Avoid the Spam
Filters
After doing some research using our good
friend Google, we've put together a list of things you
can do to
reduce the chance of your email being marked as spam
and/or
never reaching the intended recipient in the first
place:
- Make sure your list only contains
double
opt-in subscribers. Sure your list won't be as big as
it would
if you didn't require opt-in confirmation, but it will
be
safer, more valid and subscribers will be less likely
to flag
your emails as spam or complain to their email
provider.
- Using the link to Eddie's article
above, do
your absolute best to make sure your email doesn't
look like
spam. The spam filters are smart, and for everything
it finds
in your email that looks like spam it gives you one
point.
When you get to a certain number of points your email
is
rejected, so the less spam points the better.
- Check to see if your mail server
has
already been blacklisted. You want to check your ISP's
mail
server or the mail server of your web host. To see the
IP
address of the server sending your emails just send an
email
through your mail server to yourself and view the
headers of
the email in your email client.
The last received line in the headers will
contain the
IP address of your ISP or web hosts mail server
through which
your email was sent. For example, you might see 3
received
lines in the header, like this:
Received: mail.somehost.com
Received: 220.403.8.65
Received: 201.56.88.31
In the example above the IP address of your mail
server would
be 201.56.88.31
Once you've found your mail server's IP address
read
this
helpful article. It lists the different sites you
can
check to see if your mail server has been
blacklisted.
- Check with the postmaster services
of the
big email companies to see why they are rejecting your
emails.
If you don't know what a postmaster is, here's
Google's
definition:
A special type of user responsible for tracking
failed mail
delivery. A post-master is responsible for following
up on
queries from users and other postmasters. Internet
standards
require that the postmaster account be valid at every
domain.
AOL's postmaster is
http://postmaster.aol.com/ and Hotmail's is
http://postmaster.hotmail.com/. You can find
postmaster
details for other email services with a quick search
on
Google.
One thing to remember about postmaster services is
that they
make it difficult to get your email through. The
theory is
that the harder they make it, the less effort spammers
will
give, thus stopping the majority of them from
trying.
- You may also want to use one of the
email
accreditation services available, such as
SPF (sender policy framework) records for your
mailer or
DomainKeys.
You can also look at services such as
SuretyMail
to help improve the deliverability of your emails,
particularly if you're trying to send millions of
emails per
month.
I won't go into too much detail, but SPF is a way to
identify
and reject forged addresses in the return path of an
email,
which is a common technique spammers use to send
email.
DomainKeys is an email authentication system that was
developed at Yahoo. It was designed to verify the name
server
being used by someone sending bulk email.
- Finally, you should educate your
subscribers. Immediately after they join your mailing
list you
should give them a series of steps to white list your
email
address. White listing is a way of telling their email
client
to allow all emails from you into their inbox.
Each big email provider has different ways of allowing
subscribers to white list email addresses, the most
common
being to add them to their address book or contacts.
For more
on white listing
see
this
article on Wikipedia.
Conclusion
Although there's no fail-safe way to
absolutely guarantee all of the emails you send will
reach the
intended recipients, the tips in this article are an
excellent
place to start. Email deliverability is a big concern
for most
businesses (including us) and can mean the difference
between a
profitable email campaign and one that fails
miserably.
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