In order for email marketing to be effective, the emails have to get delivered.That’s step one. After that, subject lines and powerful email content.

10 Epic Ways to Make Sure Your Email Gets Delivered

I rave about email marketing all the time.

But I need to shoot straight with you about email marketing lest you think it’s some holy grail of marketing.

Your emails are useless unless they actually make it to the user’s inbox.

Let me state that another way so you don’t miss it. If your emails aren’t getting delivered, then email marketing is a massive waste of time and money.

You’ve probably read all the tips about subject lines, open rates, engaging content, powerful CTAs, and strategic email landing pages. But let’s take a big step back and look at the picture from its most foundational level — email deliverability.

In order for email marketing to be effective, the emails have to get delivered.That’s step one. After that, subject lines and powerful email content.

 

I’ve collected 10 of the smartest and most effective techniques for improving email deliverability.

1. Register a subdomain and use it only for email activity.

I don’t recommend it for everyone, but you may wish to create a subdomain that is exclusively for email marketing purposes. Over time, users will come to trust the subdomain, which is an added benefit.

The real purpose, however is that this subdomain will allow for domain-specific monitoring of your IP reputation, and be able to succeed against some domain-based certification filters.

2. Implement a sender policy framework.

A sender policy framework or SPF increases your trustworthiness in the eyes of the receiving email server. The server can cross check the domain name against the associated IP address to make sure that it is legitimate. If you don’t have an SPF in place, your emails might be rejected.

3. Check your sender reputation.

The biggest reason why your emails are not delivered is due to a low sender score. ISPs automatically reject any emails that fall below a certain score.

Sender Score is produced by Return Path. Sender Scores assigns a number to every outgoing mail server. The score is calculated by using the traditional email metrics such as unsubscribes and spam reports.

Here is a report that I pulled for one IP from which I occasionally receive marketing emails.

The sender score is on a scale from 1-100; the higher the better. The report above, at a 96, is a good score.

It’s important that you keep a close eye on your score. You can use Sender Score to get this information for free.

4. Stick to a consistent send schedule.

One cause for lower sender score and IP rejection is random and erratic broadcast activity. If you are not maintaining a regular schedule with your emails, it creates sending spikes. Do your best to stick to a consistent email sending schedule.

5. Use a double opt-in or confirmed opt-in.

The most popular form of opt-in is the single opt-in, in which the user agrees to receive an email by simply checking a box, or leaving the prechecked box checked. This might seem like a great strategy to harvest email addresses since it’s so easy and automatic. However, it can backfire by generating high amounts of spam complaints. Spam complaints are dangerous. Some ISPs begin to block sending servers after as few as 2-3 spam reports per one thousand emails.

The best way to defend against spam complaints is to use a double-opt in. All you do is send a confirmation email to the new subscriber in order to validate their address and gain their consent. (In some European countries, double opt-in is now a mandatory requirement.)


DISCOVER THE SECRET OF HOW TO GET YOUR EMAILS DELIVERED

Enter Your Email To Grab My Workbook How to Write Email Subject Lines That Will Increase Your Open Rate


6. Purge your list.

If you’re sending your marketing emails to non-existent users, you’ll ramp up your bounce rate and destroy your send credibility. Every now and then, remove all inactive recipients from your list filtering out all users who have not opened or clicked your emails in a few months.

According to Oracle, “high hard bounce (invalid) rates are the fastest way to trigger filtering and blocking on your new IP.” You may want to use a paid service to clean all hard bounces before you launch a fresh email marketing effort.

Additionally, most email validation services can catch duplicates, typos, outdated domains, do-not-email records, bogus addresses, and other common user errors.

You’re not going to lose anything by cutting the dead weight from your list.

7. Filter contest entry email signups.

The worst email lists are created from giveaways or signups. People, true to their nature, will attempt to enter multiple times using invalid or nonexistent email addresses. They don’t care about getting on your email address list; they care about a chance to win a free iPad mini.

If you are using a contest or giveaway as a method of gaining email subscribers, then you need to vet this list hard before dumping it into your subscriber list. It could be a source of hard bounces, which could land you on the IP naughty list.

8. Send emails at just the right frequency. (Once a week is probably okay.)

Too many emails can burn your subscriber list. Too few emails can kill your revenue.

So what do you do to maximize deliverability? You send just the right number of emails. The only way you can find that perfect number is by thoroughly testing, which isn’t easy. Plus, it takes a long time, during which time you might make some mistakes.

A good benchmark is one email per week. You can try scaling up to twice weekly, as long as you have really good content. You can even drop back to once a month without totally losing touch with your audience. But if you go anywhere outside of those two boundaries, you’re in dangerous territory.

9. Use branding in your “from” name.

Using your brand’s name in your “from” line will help to reduce spam complaints. It’s also been proven to improve open rates.

Increasingly, some companies use a front person, an individual, to head up their email marketing in order to give it a more personal feel. You can still use this approach. Just add “from [business name] after the individual’s name.

 

10. Check blacklists.

If you’re experiencing send problems, or even if you’re not, it’s a good idea to check the blacklists. These DNS-based blacklists are created to protect users from IPs that have received a high volume of spam reports.

Make sure that your IP is not on this list.

Conclusion

In order for email marketing to be effective, the emails have to get delivered.

That’s step one. After that, you can go crazy with creating killer subject lines and powerful email content.

Email marketing works wonders — only if you get those emails delivered.

What insights have you learned about email deliverability?

 


DISCOVER THE SECRET OF HOW TO GET YOUR EMAILS DELIVERED

Enter Your Email To Grab My Workbook How to Write Email Subject Lines That Will Increase Your Open Rate


 

 

 

 

About Martine Alphonse

Martine Alphonse is the founder of Success Revolution, a go-to hub for bloggers and entrepreneurs who want to learn how to stand out and make an authentic income on the web. Through workshops, ebooks, and ecourses, Martine offers community and expertise for budding online rockstars. As a former web designer and blog coach, Martine also has experience working one-on-one with over 150 creatives. And if we're being honest, she’s also obsessed with fashion and cooking.