How To Get Your Email Past Clients' Spam Filter
With growth rates of spam, phishing, and email-borne malware
showing no signs of abating, more and more ISPs and
enterprises are implementing stronger protective measures.
Many of these anti-spam techniques are well known to those
of us in the email industry tasked with managing
“deliverability” – the art and science of getting email
delivered to a user’s inbox in a timely and fully-functional
fashion.
Ever since the first anti-spam measures began to be widely
deployed in the mid-1990s, legitimate emails have
occasionally been caught in the net and deleted, delayed, or
shunted to “spam” folders.
As the economy tightens, many companies are refocusing their
advertising and marketing efforts on email, and as a result
many enterprise IT managers are getting a crash course in
deliverability issues.
As I have noted in many, many, many columns, there are a
number of technical and infrastructure issues that can
affect a company’s deliverability.
What IT managers and their “clients” in the marketing
department need to realize is that technical issues are only
the tip of the iceberg. Yes, the technical people tasked
with deliverability need to be aware of the impact of the
content of the messages, not just the mechanics of sending
them.
Over on the Media Post blog, David Baker has written an
excellent piece encouraging marketers to make sure that they
keep their email recipients engaged. He writes:
“Look closely at the core reason customers entered your
email program and gave you permission to send them email in
the first place, and expect that opt-in connection to last
only so long before you have to re-engage them or expand
your email portfolio for this changing need.”
On many occasions over the years I have been called upon to
investigate situations in which legitimate marketers have
had their permission-based emails flagged with the “This is
Spam” button (or “TIS,” among us hipsters in the deliv biz).
This can be disastrous for email deliverability because many
ISPs weigh user feedback via the TIS button much more
heavily than any other measure of reputation.
Why do people click the TIS on email that they specifically
opted-in to receive? It turns out that there are two main
reasons: sending too much email, and not sending enough.
Second only to sending too much email (“email fatigue”),
customers who haven’t heard from you in a long time are more
likely to have forgotten that they gave you permission and
to punish you for their forgetfulness! Building on this,
making them remember you is good, but making them look
forward to your messages is better.
Luckily, marketers have a secret weapon: they often have an
array of creative and resourceful ways of making their
messages – and their brands – memorable and compelling.
In the privacy world, we’ve always known that consumers will
give up a great deal of personal information for very little
in return. Just recently, I watched an entire family write
their names, addresses, phone numbers and email addresses on
slips of paper and slide them into the cracked-open window
of a gorgeous new 2008 Jaguar XF parked near the food court
of a local shopping mall.
While the ultimate marketing value of that data is dubious,
the lesson is clear: people will give valuable information
in exchange for something as simple as a few moments of
dreaming about winning a new car.
Making a compelling offer that keeps consumers excited to
receive and read your messages can be as simple as a
discount code or as elaborate as a snazzy new ride.
Regardless of what your creative vision comes up with, it
should be something relevant to their relationship with you
and enhances their impression of your brand.
In my experience, some of the best examples come from the
resorts in Las Vegas. Even if I’m not able to take advantage
of every new special offer, discount, or event promotion,
the messages are regularly compelling enough that I wouldn’t
think of unsubscribing -- much less clicking the TIS button.
It’s difficult to know where to draw the line between
keeping customers engaged versus annoying them. I agree with
Dave Baker that keeping consumers engaged is important, but
you’ll be positioned even better if recipients are
remembering you fondly because you’re delivering something
really compelling.
If you are tasked with managing deliverability, whether
you’re a marketer or an IT expert, you need to understand
that the messaging contained in emails can weigh just as
heavily on deliverability as technical and infrastructure
considerations.
Compelling email can be as much about improving and
maintaining deliverability as it can be about making the
sale. Or, to mangle the great line from Alec Baldwin’s
character in “Glengarry Glen Ross”: Always Be Compelling!