Bulk Email Has PenaltiesAn Article By Nicole Miller from Register Online! |  | Visited: 4228 |
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Anyone who has, or is thinking about starting, an online business
knows how tempting the marketing strategy of sending "bulk e-mail" can
be. And why not? It's free, it's easy, and it's fast. However, it's
cost in the long run can not even begin to compare.
Disguised as a "definitive target list," bulk e-mail is defined as
"spam" by the people who matter the most - your potential customers,
your Internet Presence Service reps, and your Virtual Host Service
administrators if you have one. Originally, the term "spam" referred
to repetitive postings about a particular subject broadcast to
numerous and sometimes unrelated discussion groups. However today, the
term "spam" has grown to mean, "Anything I don't want to read," and
the steps taken against receiving spam can be dangerous to your
business if you decide to use bulk e-mail as a promotional tool.
From your target market's (i.e. those who'll receive the contents of
your bulk e-mail efforts) point of view, spam is not bulk mail. It is
not mail offering something for sale. Nor is it a combination of these
two. Instead, spam is ANY message sent to a person who ***did not
ask*** to receive e-mail period. This can be a single piece of mail,
or a group of messages offering the greatest product in the world at
absolutely no cost. ISPs call this UCE (unsolicited commercial
e-mail). You call it target marketing. But those who received it and
did not ask for it, call it spam.
There's nothing wrong with spam really. It only causes problems when
you send it and people get it. And if these folks take the notion to
make a complaint (either to your ISP, virtual host service, or their
own ISP) for sending them messages unsolicited, I can guarantee you
WILL lose at least one of two very important accounts. Depending upon
who receives the most complaints first, your ISP account can be
suspended or terminated, in addition to your server host account. This
means you will lose your connection to the internet, and your website
will be down, along with any other internet configurations you have
going, such as autoresponding messages for example.
So you may say, "Big deal, I'll just get another ISP and virtual host
server!" OK, easy enough, but this moving around can unnecessarily
cost you anywhere from $50/month to $50/day. Most importantly, your
reputation will be damaged.
No one wants or can afford to be affiliated with what is labeled as a
*spammer*. Let's say I join forces with you, and you decide to
announce this merge via email. Let's also suppose your ISP and virtual
host service has received a good 2-3 complaints about you sending
unsolicited email in the past. After you send this announcement (which
my friend is spam), you get a last complaint, your account and
connection to the Internet is closed down, and I'm out of a partner
and an explanation for an hour or two (assuming you'd be good enough
to call me and explain what happened). Now I have to face the risk of
being called a spammer and my ISP and/or virtual host service
connection is threatened as well.
I've received bulk e-mail promotions promising to advertise my
business under their name only so that they will be the ones to loose
the connection and/or be fined instead of me. Tsk Tsk. I'm no fool.
Any mention of my URL in these spams, a quick jump to an internet
"who-is" function, and then Wham! - There's my name, phone number, ISP
info, and virtual host service information ready - aimed - and fired
complaints to.
As you can see, it's just not worth it. What was once a free medium
for online promotion has turned into an ugly mess of "don't bother me"
fines, suspensions, and Internet terminations. Your best bet is to not
get involved, but instead promote with what is acceptable, such as
banner exchanges, search engines, newsgroups ending with "announce" or
"marketplace" (even here you must take the time to read the group's
FAQ since some groups will accept posts only if they are "formatted"
according to the group's preferences), paid classified ads, your own
website, OFFline avenues (such as newspapers and magazines), and your
signature file.
Yes, this may take "longer". But what would you rather do? Take the
time to do it right, or, pay the fine to do it anyway you can?
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