The 5 Key Components to Email Deliverability

I often get asked as I am talking to perspective customers, “What do you do to make sure our email goes into the inbox?”.  It’s a valid question and really the number one concern for the people who are coming to us looking for help.  It isn’t until they start experiencing deliverability problems that they start looking for a managed SMTP relay service like Email On-Demand.

Based on our experience here are 5 key components that are critical in providing good deliverability for bulk email and consistently getting into the Inbox:

  1. Sending Rules – most if not all of the large ISPs have specific limits as to how many connections and number of messages per connection they will accept from a single IP address.  By not obeying these limits you can get into trouble quickly. These limits change periodically as well so you need to keep on top of the changes.
  2. Email Authentication – having properly formatted SPF DNS records, SenderID, DomainKeys and DKIM in place so an ISP can validate your identity as a sender helps build trust with the ISP.
  3. Accredited IP Addresses –  having your IP address(es) on an accredited list that is leveraged by the ISPs helps build additional trust with the ISP.  SuretyMail and ReturnPath are 2 good ones.
  4. Remove Bad Email Addresses and Complainers – two things that can really hurt deliverability is passing too many bad email addresses or having too many people complain about your email and categorize it as spam.  Immediately removing these addresses from your email lists will help ensure good deliverability.
  5. Only Send Email to People Who Have Opted-In to Receive Your Specific Email – sending to purchased or rented lists, old lists, borrowed lists, collected feed lists, etc… WILL harm your reputation and adversely effect your deliverability GUARANTEED!

We’ve found at SocketLabs that we can manage and control 1 thru 4 but, we need the cooperation of our customers to manage and control #5.  There are no shortcuts to good deliverability!

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  • Pooya M

    we used socketlab to let our customers Invite their friends via their contact list to our website, and we can not control that is their contacts list opted-in our not. I eager to hear your advice about this kind of emails
    we can not use socketlab for sending “Email Confirmation” emails because of your sending latency, is there a way to send an email immediately ?

  • http://www.socketlabs.com John Alessi

    This type of sending is against our terms of service since it is not opt-in. You will need to either cancel your account or change your sending practices to bring them into compliance. Normally we do not have any sending latency, however if your email is being rate limited by the ISPs due to complaints, etc, (possibly due to your invitation practices) then that could cause your queue to back up out of our control.

  • Pooya M

    facebook lets users to send invitation to their contact list fetched from their account. we are an online photo printing service and want to let our users to invite their friends and add them to their network finally they can share their albums with them, what is the best practice for this type of emails ?

  • http://www.socketlabs.com John Alessi

    We don't support it on our service because of the problems it causes especially with complaint levels. Many people don't like to get this type of email.

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