In this article, we will review some best practices for email deliverability. There are several factors that can affect how mailbox providers (such as Google, Yahoo, etc.) make decisions to either flag your email as spam, or allow them to arrive at inboxes.

Check out the terms and tips below for best practices for your emails:

Sending Internal Mail

If you are sending a message to the same domain that the message is coming from (i.e. sending from john@exampledomain.com to john@exampledomain.com), it may go to spam. That is because a mailbox provider can see that it appears to be receiving a message from itself. This could mean the mailbox provider thinks it is being spoofed, and thus the message will be sent to spam.

Solution: If you must send internal mail to test your messages, you may want to use a free service, like gmail. If you’re sending internal mail outside of testing purpose, the manager of the domain will need to whitelist the IP address of your SMTP provider.

DMARC

Does the domain you use for sending mail have a DMARC policy? (DMARC stands “Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting & Conformance”. It is an email authentication, policy, and reporting protocol used to improve protection of a domain from fraudulent emails. You can learn more about DMARC here: https://dmarc.org/)

If your domain uses a DMARC policy but you haven’t verified the domain with your SMTP provider, your messages could be marked as spam.

Solution: Check with your SMTP provider for instructions on how to ensure your messages passes DMARC.

Sending From a Public Domain

If you’re sending messages from a free domain such as gmail.com, yahoo.com, or outlook.com, your messages may end up in spam.

Solution: Send email from a domain that you 0wn which matches your branding. E.g. instead of sending from mybusiness@gmail.com, send from firstname@businessdomain.com 

Best Practices for Subscriber List Health & List Collection

This is important but we highly recommend making sure you’re all set with the aspects above before spending time here. Here’s a few key factors to check:

Best Practices for Words to Consider Before Using

Below are some words and phrases that spam filters often view as red flags. Context will also assist, if you utilize only one or two of the words or phrases below, have a low bounce rate, and take other actions to ensure your emails comply with non-spam policies, you’ll be all set. 

Words that make promises too good to be true:

Words that may pressure or create urgency for your leads:

Words that may seem shady or lead to unethical behavior:

Words that are often seen as jargon or legalese:

Check out our “Email Deliverability 101” article for more tips and best practices on email deliverability.

Keyword Lists retrieved from: https://www.activecampaign.com…

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