| As an email marketer,
we believe that the best way you can avoid spamming your customers is
by using something we call “honest common sense”. Here are
a few examples of common sense when it comes to email
marketing:
- Make your email recipient feelings more important
than your need to market your products or services
- Hold your organization to the highest email marketing
standards
- Vigorously - and immediately -- investigate any
spam complaint you receive and provide a toll-free number for your recipients
to air their spam complaints
- Keep meticulous track of your email addresses including
bounces and unsubscribe requests
- Immediately honor your unsubscribe requests
Unfortunately, spam avoidance requires so much more
than the points listed above. To help you navigate the minefield known
as email marketing, we’ve included a checklist
of good practices below from some of the top email marketing associations.
If you’re not sure your email will be considered
spam, ask yourself the following questions:
- Are you uncertain that your email recipients have
given you permission to contact them?
- Have you falsified your originating address or transmission
path information?
- Have you used a third party or address or domain
name without permission?
- Does your email subject line contain false or misleading
information?
- Does your email fail to provide a working unsubscribe
link?
- Is your unsubscribe link difficult to find?
If you answered “yes” to any of the questions
above, you are in danger of being labeled a spammer by customers and ISPs.
This will ruin your company reputation and land you on a blacklist.
The following is a list of 12 common sense ways to make
certain your email doesn’t get counted as spam:
1. Personalize your email whenever possible
At the very minimum, use your recipient first and last names in the body
of your email or in the subject line. In addition, use our whitelisting
instructions to improve your delivery rates.
2. Follow federal and local spam guidelines
Since many states have their own spam statutes, each one may have their
own definition of what unsolicited commercial email (spam) consists of.
In addition to following local guidelines, make sure you’re compliant
with Federal
Can Spam regulations. Benchmark Email takes significant steps to ensure
that all our clients are Can Spam compliant, but you should go even further
by following good email marketing practices.
3. Practice double opt-in
Use double opt-in (closed-loop opt-in) email marketing practices. This
means you’ll not only legitimately gather customer requests to send
emails, but you’ll send your recipients a follow-up email that asks
them to confirm their subscription. Double opt-in is the gold
standard of permission-based email marketing
practices and will bring you better delivery rates, a more-focused customer
list, among other rewards. To find out more about double opt-in,
click
here.
4. Do not buy or rent email lists
Buying or renting a list is always a bad idea. The people on bought or
rented lists have not given you specific permission to email them. These
lists also often contain “spam traps” – email addresses
used by ISPs to catch spammers. It only takes a single email to a spam
trap to land your company on a blacklist and ruin your sender reputation,
so avoid buying or renting email lists at all costs. Please note:
Benchmark Email does not accept customers with bought or rented lists.
To learn how to build your permission list, click
here.
5. Keep your lists up to date
More than 30% of email addresses change every year. Of those addresses,
many are “taken back” by ISPs and used as spam traps. So what
was once considered a legitimate email address is now considered a spam
trap. In other words, do you know how fresh your list is? Use this checklist
to find out:
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How old is your list? |
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Is your list permission based? |
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When was the last time you sent email
to your list? |
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Has your list been maintained and properly
cleansed of unsubscribe addresses? |
If you list is more than six months old or you haven’t
emailed your recipients for six months or more, consider sending your
recipients a “remember me?” message asking them to click on
a link to reconfirm that they’d like to receive emails from you.
6. Do not harvest email addresses
Email harvesting, or the practice of trolling Websites and making a list
of visible email address is not only an unethical practice, it can bring
you heavy fines – and worse – prison time. It’s also
an easy way to get blacklisted. Please note that Benchmark Email
does not take on customers who use harvesting to build lists.
7. If you inherit a list, do not assume you
can send to the recipients
Suppose a co-worker gives you a list of email addresses and swears it
is opt-in. That may be true, but have the recipients signed up to receive
email from you specifically? Most likely, the answer is “no”.
If you still believe the list recipients will want to receive you emails,
send each of them an individual email (from your personal account) asking
them if you can add them to your mailing list. Even though your final
list will be smaller, you’ll have better delivery rates and better
sales.
8. Think of timeliness when sending to your customers
If you have a list of customers who have bought items from your company
in the past (as well as provided you their email address), feel free to
email them. However, make absolutely certain that they are customers who
purchased items from you within the last six months or so. If you choose
to email your customers after they’ve last purchased items six or
eight months ago, chances are some of those email addresses have changed
and you could end up mailing to a spam trap. Use double opt-in and reconfirm
your customer sign ups to solve this problem.
9. Consider frequency when sending to your customers
Sending multiple emails only days apart may not be illegal, but it will
upset your recipients. The worst outcome? They’ll mark your email
as spam, because, well, they’ll feel like you’re bothering
them. Your best bet is to email your customers no more than once every
week. Instead, concentrate on making each email as appealing as possible.
And if your customers sign up to receive monthly emails from you, don’t
change the game by emailing them more frequently than you promised.
10. Make your unsubscribe link and address easy
to find
The Federal Can Spam act requires that all commercial emails include an
accurate mailing address and an easy to find unsubscribe link. Make it
easy for your customers to unsubscribe and it will boost the quality of
your list. Benchmark Email automatically inserts an unsubscribe
link in all customer emails.
11. Keep your list clean
Take the time to practice good list hygiene. This means that you must
not only frequently purge your hard-bounced email addresses, but take
care to remove duplicate addresses and emails that soft bounce over and
over again. In other words, if an email comes back again and again with
a message that the mailbox is full or the server is having technical problems,
it’s time to take those customers off your list.
12. Be honest in your subject lines
Misleading your customers by using inaccurate or misleading subject lines
is a sure way to get your emails sent to the spam file. It is also a direct
violation of the Can Spam Act. Build up customer trust by delivering in
your copy what you promise in your subject line. |