Posts Tagged ‘Best Practices’

Getting a Handle on Soft Bounces

Tuesday, December 21st, 2010

Welcome to the second in a series of posts focusing on questions we received from participants during and after our recent webinar on the topic. (If you missed it, we’ve posted a recorded version online, and we’ll announce when we’ve scheduled our next live deliverability webinar.) Last time, we talked about open rates and metrics. Today’s questions focus on soft bounces. After the webinar, an attendee e-mailed me the following question:

How many times should a recipient soft bounce before I suppress them?

Before we delve too deeply for an answer, it’s worth taking a moment to explain what a generic soft bounce is, and what the recipient mail server may be trying to tell you when they send it.

A generic soft bounce often indicates a temporary deferral, or de-prioritization of your e-mail. Unlike specific bounce types (e.g., user not found, mailbox full), a generic soft bounce does not indicate a recipient-specific condition. Rather, generic soft bounces are a sign that the receiving ISP has a problem with the mail or with the sender.

It often happens that, in the middle of the server-to-server transaction in which mail is presented to the recipient domain for delivery, the receiving server decides that it has accepted all of the mail it is prepared to accept during the current transaction. The balance of the mail in that transaction is then soft bounced, without any additional resources consumed by processing or filtering the mail, and with no regard to the recipient address, deliverable or otherwise.

There’s a range of possible reasons why an ISP will generic soft-bounce mail. Some of the major free inbox providers – like Microsoft Live Hotmail and Yahoo! – limit the volume of mail it will deliver from a sender during a given period of time based on reputation, how many messages in the send are addressed to non-existent accounts, and other considerations. Once that limit is exceeded, they’ll bounce any additional mail until the rate falls below the limit.

ISPs are very reluctant to share how they calculate these types of limits, because they don’t want bad actors to use that information to game their systems and evade their filtering processes. Instead, senders should try to implement those practices that improve sender reputation, so these limits can be raised or lifted entirely.

So, back to the question at hand: the generic soft bounce rate should not be a consideration in a decision of whether to suppress a particular recipient address. If you’re seeing a large number of generic soft bounces even after resend attempts, take it as a sign that it’s time to focus on best sender practices.

A follow-up question: what about “mailbox full” bounces?

Unlike the generic soft bounce, the “mailbox full” soft bounce is specific to an individual recipient e-mail address, and it means pretty much what it says: the mailbox is full, and any additional messages addressed to it will continue to bounce until the owner makes room by deleting some mail or adding capacity.

Senders can continue to send to recipients that bounce with a “mailbox full” message, but these bear very close scrutiny. A full mailbox can be a sign of an abandoned account (or one that is about to be abandoned), especially if the address is hosted by one of the big, free inbox providers, like Gmail or AOL.

Persistent attempts to send to full mailboxes can damage your sender reputation. The thinking goes something like this: if the sender continues to send to the same full mailboxes month after month, they may not be particularly careful with other aspects of their lists. ISPs know that even confirmed opt-in lists run into full mailboxes – it happens all the time. But they also know that senders with weaker permission run into the problem more often. Either way, the longer an address continues to bounce “mailbox full”, the less likely it is to become deliverable again, and it should be suppressed.

Senders can be somewhat less aggressive in suppressing full mailboxes at smaller receiving domains, like corporate e-mail accounts. Lots of corporate IT administrators aren’t as diligent about deactivating the mailboxes of former employees as senders would like, and there’s usually no reputation damage associated with them. From a ROI perspective, though, if you think a particular “full mailbox” should really be a “user not found” because the employee has moved on, it’s a good idea to suppress it.

That wraps it up for today’s questions. During the webinar, we touched briefly on what the law requires of senders. There have been some significant developments on the e-mail legal front since then, and in our next installment, we’ll take a deeper look.

Andrew Barrett is Senior Director, ISP Relations & Deliverability for Real Magnet.

What color is your (Hot)mail?

Friday, June 18th, 2010

E-mail deliverability folk are all abuzz this week about the roll-out of major changes to Hotmail that began Tuesday. It’s hard to accurately predict what impact they’ll have on senders, but we can make some early, educated guesses.

The feature that’s receiving the lion’s share of attention is the one Hotmail has dubbed “Sweep”. Sweep helps recipients to move what Hotmail calls “gray mail” – mail that is not spam, but that may no longer be relevant to the recipient – out of the inbox. Like an inbox janitor, sweep declutters the inbox by automatically moving gray mail to the trash or to another folder for later action.

What makes sweep different from existing user level filtering tools is ease of use. Recipients won’t need to build cumbersome filtering rules to manage gray mail; Hotmail presents a simplified button interface to set and apply sweep preferences.

That’s good news and bad news for senders. The good news is that recipients will have an alternative to reporting permissioned mail as spam. Senders have long bemoaned that lazy recipients  all too often use the “This is spam” button as a sort of malformed unsubscribe request from permission-based mail. Sweep will move gray mail out of users’ inboxes without a hit to sender reputation. The bad news is that Sweep remembers user preferences, so if a user sweeps a sender’s mail once, Hotmail is likely to continue to sweep that sender’s mail until the user intervenes.

If the recipient deletes a particular sender’s mail unopened several times, Hotmail will eventually prompt them to unsubscribe with a new feature called (appropriately enough) Prompted Unsubscribe. Again, a mixed bag for senders: it will undoubtedly reduce list size by some amount; however, it removes recipients who are no longer engaged anyhow, which should actually improve open and conversion rates.

One final feature of note from a deliverability standpoint is Time Traveling Filters. Hotmail will retroactively filter unopened mail that had already made it to the inbox if the sender’s reputation later tanks. That means there’s no longer a guarantee that a message delivered to the inbox will actually stay there until the recipient can act on it.

Hotmail’s changes emphasize the growing importance that reputation and engagement will play in the e-mail universe. The take-away for senders: don’t send gray mail. Keep your recipients engaged with relevant, compelling content, so that what gets to the inbox stays in the inbox. Real Magnet customers have some powerful assets at their disposal to help do that, and we’re ready to help.

Andrew Barrett is Senior Director for ISP Relations and Deliverability for Real Magnet.

Legislative Update: Is the FTC Finished with E-mail?

Friday, May 21st, 2010

I sat in on an FTC legislative update webinar presented by The E-mail Experience Council Wednesday afternoon, and thought it might be useful to run down some of the high points for the Real Magnet blog.

Lois Greisman of the FTC started the webinar by asserting that CAN SPAM “leveled the playing field” by providing a road map for legitimate marketers to follow in terms best practices, and a way to distinguish good actors from the bad. I’m not sure I agree with her on that last point; I receive a daily bucket load of unsolicited bulk e-mail that complies with CAN SPAM, and I have trouble discerning the good actors among them.

She noted that the law has been a useful tool for going after certain types of spammers. As an example, she points to the US$2.9-million judgment against ValueClick, who last spring were found to have used brazenly deceptive subject lines in their e-mail (remember the “click here for a free iPod” guys?), among other sins.

Greisman stated flat out that the FTC is uninterested in pursuing broader e-mail specific protections, noting that Congress spoke quite clearly in the passage of the law, and had carefully considered but eventually discarded stiffer requirements. The FTC seems to be signaling that CAN SPAM, with all its flaws, will remain the law of the land as written (and subsequently clarified in the rules update of May 2008), and that we should not expect additional e-mail marketing specific requirements anytime soon.

Legislators are, however, considering an expansion of FTC rule-making authority and enforcement powers that has the Direct Marketing Association a bit nervous. In some cases, it would allow the FTC to impose immediate civil penalties on fraudsters, and give them the opportunity to “go down the food chain” after organizations that aided and abetted the fraud.

For details on these and other topics addressed in the webinar, have a look at my twitter time line for my live narrative of the hour-long session. You’re very welcome to follow me there.  You may also follow Real Magnet’s twitter here.

Andrew Barrett is Sr. Director, ISP Relations & Deliverability at Real Magnet.

Are your Emails the Ads, or the Content?

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Something fascinating has happened in the advertising industry over the past few years. Many advertisers have stopped acting like companies trying to sell you stuff, and started acting more and more like publishers – creators of content and entertainment designed to appeal to their target audience.

For example:

- YouTube enables commercials to stretch from 30-second pitches to 5-minute narratives (a la BMW Films)
- Rich technology allows advertisers to move past product information and into interactive environments
- Platform agnostic, advertisers are moving their content into mobile and even video games

Why the shift? Advertisers are in the attention game. Ad clutter has skyrocketed with the adoption of interactive media, and attention is harder and harder to come by. So smart advertisers changed the game. Instead of trying to squeeze ads in between the compelling content consumers are consuming, they started creating the compelling content themselves.

Take a look at your recent emails. Which are they, the ads or the content?

Do your emails say, “We interrupt your inbox with a brief message from our sponsor?” Or are yours the messages your subscribers are looking for, relegating others to “interrupter” status?

If you want to capture more subscriber attention, and turn your email into the content that squeezes the competing messages out, try these tips:

Be selfless. I know we send emails in order to drive a certain action – to register for a conference or download a whitepaper or sign up for a webinar. And it’s true that all of these products are a service to your subscribers. But is there a way for the email to be valuable on its own, independent of the action you want your subscribers to take? For example, if you’re promoting a webinar, instead of “Register Here” being the leading message, try leading with one of the key findings the webinar will present. Your email then serves as a proof-of-concept for the webinar, and has delivered value to your subscribers. Don’t worry about “giving away the shop”. Prospective attendees are trying to determine if the event is worth their time – you’ve just given them proof that it is.

Think like a blogger. There are about 130 million blogs out there, give or take ten million. Imagine trying to compete for attention where ten million prospective rivals amounts to a rounding error. Still, some bloggers manage to do pretty well. The best ones have the same secret: produce content they are uniquely qualified for, and vigilantly protect this focus. Good email marketers do the same thing. They have a unique and interesting content strategy, and take a long view to stay true to their strategy.

Preview next week’s episode. Want them to tune in again next time? Give them an idea of what they can expect. Obviously, this takes a little pre-planning, though it doesn’t amount to any extra work since you have to decide what’s in the next email eventually. But the flip side is that it will save you time later on, and will help boost your ratings.

Free Email Check Up Webinar

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

It’s that time again. Time to review how your email marketing performed this year…and figure out how to do it better next year.

Get a jump start on your year-end email review by attending our next webinar – Your 2009/2010 Email Check Up.

Real Magnet’s Director of Training Catherine Curtin will take you through some MagnetMail features and functions that will help you assess how your MagnetMail messages did in 2009 and see how you can use these features to improve your email marketing in 2010. Join us on Thursday at 2 p.m. for this free webinar!