Email Deliverability: Why Emails Go to Spam and What to Do About It

So much effort goes into crafting the perfect email for your customers or supporters.

But then someone tells you they didnโ€™t receive your email. You check your email reporting and see that only 2 out of 5 people opened your email. You might ask yourself, โ€œDid my email get marked as spam?โ€ While it may not be true every time, this certainly is possible. This is email deliverability.

In this article, Iโ€™ll show you why email deliverability matters so much, and how you can keep your email from going to spam.

Table of Contents

  • Why email deliverability matters
  • Email deliverability explained
  • Why is my email going to spam?
  • How to improve email deliverability and avoid emails going to spam
    • 1. Brand reputation
    • 2. Good infrastructure
    • 3. Sender authentication
  • Steps to improve your reputation and email deliverability
    • 1. Always ask permission
    • 2. Avoid spam traps that make your email look spammy
    • 3. Present yourself as a professional
    • 4. Take unsubscribes seriously
    • 5. Follow the laws around email marketing
  • Itโ€™s time to improve your email deliverability rates

If youโ€™re a Constant Contact customer, youโ€™re in luck! We do most of the heavy lifting to make sure your emails get where they need to go โ€” to your subscribersโ€™ inbox and not their spam folder.
Still not using email marketing?ย Give Constant Contact a try for FREE!

Why email deliverability matters

Most people donโ€™t think about deliverability until they have a major issue with their sender reputation โ€” like when hundreds, or in some cases thousands, of emails fail to reach customers. Just because an email doesnโ€™t bounce, doesnโ€™t mean it was delivered.

In fact, according to Validityโ€™s Email Deliverability Benchmark Report, as many as 17% of emails did not make it to the inbox.

If youโ€™re using email marketing for your small business, you know how important it is to make sure your marketing emails find their way into your customersโ€™ email inboxes. When your communications donโ€™t reach your customers, you may lose out on potential revenue and you may also damage your reputation.

Consider this: If you have 1,000 contacts on your list but only 83% of your emails are delivered, then 170 contacts didnโ€™t even receive your email. Many of those contacts may not have expected the message, so they donโ€™t know they are missing out. Even if they do realize, they may not check to see what happened. They might just stop doing business with you, especially if this happens repeatedly.

While the impact is unique to every business or organization, take a minute to ask yourself: What does losing over 17% of my mailing list mean to me?

Email deliverability explained

Simply put, email deliverability measures the percentage of successfully delivered emails to your customersโ€™ inboxes. It is slightly different than email delivery rate, as the latter checks if your email has bounced, but doesnโ€™t confirm it actually reached an inbox or junk folder. Email deliverability is a better measure of success since it checks whether your email made it all the way to a customerโ€™s inbox or not. Emails that reach the inbox have a greater chance of being opened.

Email deliverability failures happen when your email lands up in a customerโ€™s junk/spam folder or has been blocked by an Internet Service Provider (ISP).

Why is my email going to spam?

There is no one simple answer for everyone to explain why emails are ending up in the spam folder, but some of the most common reasons email ends up as spam are:

  • Emailing someone before collecting their express permission
  • Your IP address has been used for spam in the past
  • Past recipients of your emails have reported them as spam
  • Your emails have a low number of people opening them, making them seem irrelevant and spammy to email clients
  • Youโ€™re using spam trigger words that make you look spammy in the inbox
  • Itโ€™s been a long time since you cleaned and organized your email list

How to improve email deliverability and avoid emails going to spam

There are steps you can take to keep the number of emails going to spam low and make sure your newsletters or announcements get delivered.

Here are three factors that help your emails land in the right place:

1. Brand reputation

As a business owner, you know your reputation matters; what people think about your business is important. Itโ€™s the same with email deliverability. The better your sender reputation, the more emails make it to your customersโ€™ inboxes. Your email reputation is measured by the quality of your mailing list and the extent to which you follow email marketing best practices.

Ask yourself:

  • Have you received a customerโ€™s consent before sending them emails?
  • Are you avoiding spam words and phrases?
  • Are you sending content that customers want and find relevant?

These might seem rather basic questions but are extremely important when it comes to building a good email reputation.

Pay close attention to your email marketing metrics โ€” bounces, open and click-through rates โ€” to track your engagement. Make adjustments where necessary. Also, be sure to not send too many emails as high-volume senders often trigger a red flag with an internet service provider (ISP), especially when volumes are inconsistent.

These steps help you avoid getting on an ISPโ€™s blocklist. Landing on a blocklist means youโ€™ve been tagged as a spammer who can be blocked from sending further emails. A good email reputation helps the ISP remove your IP from their list.

2. Good infrastructure

Email deliverability infrastructure is the software and hardware used to send emails to your customers. Setting up and maintaining your own infrastructure for high-volume email marketing can be tiresome and complicated, not to mention expensive, especially for a small business.

Thereโ€™s also the case of figuring out which IP address to use. Dedicated IPs can be used exclusively for email drip campaigns and time-sensitive campaigns. These provide a direct connection to your ISP, who in turn delivers emails to your customers at lightning-fast speeds. Or,ย if you send fewer than 300,000 emails per campaign, you may opt for a Shared IP.

Sound a little complicated? Luckily, you donโ€™t have to worry too much about infrastructure โ€” as long as youโ€™re using the right email marketing provider. When you send email through Constant Contact, your emails are sent through our mail servers and therefore will be associated with our IP address. We work hard to protect our IP reputation and actively monitor accounts to prevent spam activity. Weโ€™ve also built relationships with many ISPs so we can act quickly to resolve reputation issues if they arise.

3. Sender authentication

Email authentication allows your business to take responsibility for emails you send and ensures your customer can validate that the email came your business.

Scams such as phishing and spoofing โ€” which are based on forging the sender of an email โ€” become much easier to detect when an email sender is authenticated. Authentication also provides a validated identity to which your email sending reputation data can associate. Customers can be confident that the email delivered to their inboxes is legitimate.

Once authenticated, email clients like Gmail, Outlook, and others can use the senderโ€™s online reputation data to decide what to do with incoming mail:

  • BLOCK: messages which fail authentication (fraud, phishing, scams).
  • ALLOW: mail from known good senders that pass authentication.
  • Send to the spam folder: an unknown and untrusted email.

There are three main methods of authentication every business must implement themselves unless they are using an email marketing tool like Constant Contact

  1. Sender Policy Framework (SPF Record): Authenticates who can send mail on behalf of the domain found in the return-path address (the domain found in the headers used by mail servers for bounces).
  2. DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM Authentication): Developed in part by Yahoo and seeks to validate that an email was sent by an authorized email sender, using an encryption key to automatically verify the emailโ€™s origin.
  3. DMARC: A policy set by the sending domain which states what type of Authentication their messages are signed with (SPF or DKIM) and tells the receiving domain what they should do with the mail (bounce, quarantine) if it does not pass authentication.

Steps to improve your reputation and email deliverability

While all this may seem daunting, there are several tricks you can use to keep your email reputation intact and your customers happy.

1. Always ask permission

We cannot stress this enough! If someone hasnโ€™t asked to hear from you, itโ€™s likely they wonโ€™t recognize your email in their inbox and might end up deleting your email without reading it โ€” or worse, mark you as spam. Itโ€™s imperative you ask your customers to โ€œopt-inโ€ to receive emails from you.

This is called permission-based email marketing, and itโ€™s the best route towards developing long-lasting customer relationships. When you ask permission, youโ€™re able to build a list of people who are interested in your business and are excited to hear from you. Theyโ€™re more likely to open your email, less likely to mark it as spam, and will stay with you longer than contacts who are added without consent.

2. Avoid spam traps that make your email look spammy

To minimize the possibility of your email messages being filtered out as spam, you should avoid the following:

  • Heavy use of spam words (like free, discount, guarantee, etc.)
  • Writing in all capital letters: You must resist the temptation to write in ALL CAPS. When you use all capital letters, there is no differentiation between words. This makes them harder to read. It also makes your email look like spam and dramatically increases the likelihood of your email being filtered out of the inbox.
  • Excessive punctuation use: Using too many exclamation marks (!!!) is likely to trip email filters especially when used in conjunction with spam-like words and capital letters.
  • Adding too many symbols and links: Excessive use of $$, %, or other symbols, and including too many โ€œclick hereโ€ links tends to trigger spam filters.

3. Present yourself as a professional

Craft your subject lines carefully and always match your subject line to your email content. Never employ spam tactics like leaving the subject line blank or using โ€œRE:โ€ so that the recipient thinks it is a reply to a previous email. Not only does this affect your email reputation, but also impacts your open rates.

Donโ€™t forget: looks matter! You should be consistent with your email design across all campaigns you send. Your website and other marketing material look the same, so why shouldnโ€™t your emails?

Remember, your audience is familiar with your brand identity. If you do decide to completely overhaul your design, send your customers a teaser email to let them know things are changing, and inform them when they should expect the change to happen. That way, your customers are prepared and wonโ€™t dismiss your email if they donโ€™t recognize it.

4. Take unsubscribes seriously

GetData surveyed over 500 internet users to learn the most common reasons for unsubscribing from an email newsletter. Mostly everyone said they received too many emails, and many said the emails theyโ€™d received looked like spam.

Instead of forcing customers to receive emails from you (which they might not open and simply delete) itโ€™s better to give them the option to opt-out.

If you are a Constant Contact customer, every email you send includes an unsubscribe link. Also, make sure to monitor the inbox for the address youโ€™re using to send your email campaigns, as many people will reply to your email and ask to be taken off your list. If they ask, youโ€™ll want to promplty remove them. Remember โ€” itโ€™s better that they are removed from your list than if they continue to receive your emails and mark them as spam.

Chances are youโ€™ve been on both sides of the unsubscribe before. Donโ€™t sweat it. If someone is bent on unsubscribing, they will. Just make sure to provide consistent value to readers and let them know the kind of content they will be receiving before they sign up.

5. Follow the laws around email marketing

When sending campaigns through Constant Contact itโ€™s very important that you abide by the rules of the CAN-SPAM and CASL legislation.

The CAN-SPAM Act stands for the Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing Act. While this law will not stop spam, it does make most spam illegal and ultimately less attractive to ISPs. The law is specific about the requirements for sending commercial email and empowers the federal government to enforce the law.

CASL is short for the Canadian Anti-Spam Legislation that went into effect back in 2014. CASL intends to protect electronic commerce in Canada by deterring damaging or deceptive forms of spam, such as identity theft, phishing, and spyware.

In addition to CASL, you now need to make sure your business follows the regulations of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), whether youโ€™re a business within the European Union (EU), or simply have clients in the EU.

The Constant Contact Privacy Statement explains what we collect and how we handle your personal data. This statement includes many examples of how personal data may be used by Constant Contact. We suggest that you take the time to understand how this applies to you.

Itโ€™s time to improve your email deliverability rates

The secrets to email deliverability are simple: Keep a clean subscriber list and donโ€™t send spam.

As a Constant Contact customer, you are more likely to be compliant with CAN-SPAM, CASL and GDPR legislation at the start. However, the ultimate responsibility is on your business. Make sure you always:

  • Send emails and write engaging content your customers want to receive and read
  • Remove incorrect email addresses from your contact list, especially if a message bounces
  • Use our products and tools as-intended. When in doubt, ask a Marketing Advisor for help.

Weโ€™re here to help you stay in-the-know on best practices, reduce bounces, and get your emails opened. Take the time to learn how to increase your email deliverability โ€” and improve your email marketing.

The post Email Deliverability: Why Emails Go to Spam and What to Do About It appeared first on Constant Contact.