Ignoring Bouncebacks Can Ruin Your Email SuccessEmail List Marketing |  | Visited: 1080 |
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| | by 519 stu dio March 11, 2009 |
If you use email, chances are you have seen a “bounceback” message
in your inbox. You get one whenever you send an email to someone and
then — for whatever reason — their server rejects the message.
The “bounceback” message usually contains the original email you
sent, as well as an explanation as to why the message was rejected.
There are two types of bouncebacks you need to know about:
Type #1: Hard Bouncebacks
A hard bounceback occurs when you send a message to an email account
that no longer exists. The account has been closed for some reason, so
the mail server that hosted the account will send your message back,
notifying you of this change.
Hard bouncebacks are particularly common when you send mail to free
email accounts with providers such as Hotmail, Gmail, and Yahoo. That’s
because many people use these free accounts as a secondary or
disposable account for random newsletter subscriptions and such.
When the volume of email to their free account gets too high, people often shut it down, create a new one, and move on.
But unfortunately — if they forget to send you their new address — you’re stuck with an email address that no longer exists!
Type #2: Soft Bouncebacks
A soft bounceback occurs when you send an email to an account that
is still valid but is temporarily unable to receive email. The most
common cause of soft bouncebacks is when an email account is too full
or the server that hosts the account is temporarily down.
Why You need to Manage Your Bouncebacks
Because soft bouncebacks are generated when an email account is
still valid, you don’t need to remove them from your email list. Where
you want to focus your attention is on hard bouncebacks.
In order to maintain the highest deliverability, you need to constantly remove hard bouncebacks from your email list.
If you continue to send email to addresses that are no longer valid,
the ISPs (Internet service providers) that previously hosted those
addresses may consider you a spammer — and block ALL the email you send
to any other email accounts they host.
For example, let’s say I have 1000 @yahoo.com addresses on my email
list and over a period of 6 months 100 of those email accounts are
closed and become invalid.
If I still continue to send email to those invalid accounts, Yahoo
will assume that I’m a spammer sending unsolicited email to random
accounts — and they will block any emails I send to the 900 remaining
valid accounts.
Ouch!
The process of managing your bouncebacks is called “list hygiene.”
In order to get the highest amount of email delivered to your
subscribers, you want to stay on top of your list hygiene and remove
email addresses from your list as soon as you get a hard bounceback after sending to them.
Automate the Process
As your list grows, you’ll want to invest in some software that will help you categorize and manage your bouncebacks.
Most email software packages or services provide this feature. If yours doesn’t, then it’s probably time to upgrade!
Don’t Forget to Follow up and Get the New Address!
If you do get a hard bounceback from a previous customer, be sure to
follow up with them via phone or even snail mail to get their updated
information.
All your customers are valuable and you don’t want to lose a single
one from your list! The time you invest getting their updated email
address is typically time well spent.
Remember, this is just one step in maintaining a clean email list
that gets the best deliverability. For an in-depth look at how to get
the absolute highest deliverability and response from all of your email
campaigns, keep visiting this blog.
Happy Emailing!
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