Email deliverability: What you need to know

We’ve updated our article about email deliverability requirements to include a section on the impact of sales engagement tools.

Email deliverability: What you need to know

Deliverability may not be the most interesting part of email marketing, but it is the most important. It doesn’t matter how good your creatives or offers are if they never get to the email inbox. 

Getting to the inbox is getting tougher. Earlier this year, Google and Yahoo started enforcing new requirements for bulk email senders. Fortunately, the requirements help reputable email marketers by making best practices mandatory. 

Here is your guide to why the requirements were put in place, the impact and cost of deliverability problems and how to ensure your email always goes through.

Why are the rules getting tougher?

“Google, Yahoo and many other mailbox providers are getting more and more frustrated having to deal with spam,” Al Iverson, industry research and community engagement lead at Valimail, told MarTech. “So you have requirements that are tightening up, meant to make it harder to send unwanted and unsolicited emails.”

How big is the spam problem?

“The latest figure I saw was something like 347,000,000,000 emails sent a day,” Cynthia Price, SVP of Marketing at Litmus, told Martech. “And over half of those, depending on which metrics you look at, are estimated to be spam.” That’s 173,000,000,000 spam emails a day.

“The internet service providers, the Googles and the Yahoos and the Microsofts of the world are really, really trying to do everything they can to hold down the fort and protect our inboxes from mayhem,” said Price.

What are the new requirements?

The new requirements codify the very well-tested best practices of email marketing. 

“Best practices are now transitioning to literally written-up requirements that mailbox providers like Gmail and Yahoo post on their website and say, ‘These are the things you have to do now,’” said Iverson, who is also the longtime publisher of The Spam Resource newsletter.

For the most part, the requirements focus on three areas: authentication of outgoing emails, reported spam rates and the ability to easily unsubscribe from email lists.

Authentication

Bulk email senders — generally those sending emails to at least 5,000 addresses a day — must use the following::

  • Sender Policy Framework (SPF) helps prevent domain spoofing by allowing senders to identify the email servers that are allowed to send emails from their domain.
  • DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) adds a digital signature to outgoing email, which verifies the message was sent by an authorized sender and wasn’t tampered with along the way. 
  • Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting and Conformance (DMARC) helps domain owners specify which actions to take when an email fails authentication. It also enables reporting on email authentication results.

 

Spam rates

Google says bulk senders must keep their reported spam rate (i.e., the percentage of outgoing messages reported as spam by recipients) in Google Postmaster Tools below 0.1% and “avoid ever reaching 0.3% or higher.”

Yahoo says the spam rate must be below 0.3%.

Unsubscribe

Yahoo and Google require organizations to make it easy for people to unsubscribe. 

This means: 

  • Use of functioning list-unsubscribe header, which supports one-click unsubscribe for marketing and subscribed messages.
  • Have a clearly visible unsubscribe link in the email body.
  • Process unsubscribe requests within two days.

“No more trying to hide the unsubscribe link or sending people to a landing page that has a phone number on it,” said Price. “I see lots of that still happening and that’s just got to stop. People need to be able to remove themselves from your list because if you force them to stay on it, all you are doing is frustrating them further and encouraging them to mark you as spam every single time.”

The cost of deliverability failure

According to Mailtrap, the cost of undelivered emails for U.S. businesses is:

  • $ 164+ million daily.
  • $ 1.1+ billion weekly.
  • $ 4.9+ billion monthly.
  • $ 59.5+ billion yearly.

Deliverability problems cost more than $ 15,000 for every million emails sent, according to a report by Validity.

“A lot of people don’t understand they have deliverability problems until it’s too late,” said Price. “And, much like a credit score, it takes time to build it back up and to be recognized as a safe sender.”

Deliverability success rates going up

  • Over the past three years, the average deliverability rate improved from 94.26% in 2020 to 96.43% in 2023. 
  • The average bounce rate was 1.98%.
  • Over the past four years, the ecommerce industry has seen the biggest improvement in deliverability rates (10.28% rise) and a drop in bounce rates (0.7%).
  • The overall average unsubscribe rate decreased 26.32% over the past 4 years. 
  • The overall spam rate went down by 44.4% in 2023 compared to 2020.

Source: Selzy Email Marketing Performance by Industry, 2024 Benchmarks

 

Consumers hate deliverability failures, too

Businesses are not the only ones upset when an email doesn’t go through. Consumers want emails when the content interests them. They are unhappy if they don’t get them.

According to a report from Mailgun:

  • When emails from a brand regularly land in spam, 52.7% of consumers say they would either feel frustrated, lose trust, or unsubscribe as a result.
  • Over 70% of consumers check their spam folders to see if important emails are missing, and almost 33% find it annoying when they find emails from brands in their spam folders.
Email deliverability: What you need to know
Source: Mailgun’s Email and the Customer Experience 2024 report

Deliverability best practices

Tighter regulations are also clearer regulations. Yahoo and Google are making the requirements very clear to everyone. 

“The good news is they are really trying to be transparent about what their algorithms are, how they measure bad practices and what they look for,” said Price. “It’s important to stay up to speed on what those are. What are you supposed to be doing?”

These best practices can be summed up as, “DO NOT SPAM.” Send relevant content to people who’ve said they want to hear from you. 

Monitor your inbox placement rate. This tells you if your email program is working and when messages are blocked by mailbox providers.

Keep your email lists clean. Be sure there are no spam traps, unknown users and inactive subscribers. Use a double opt-in process to reduce inactive and spam addresses on your list. Use a contact verification solution on your existing list and be sure new addresses are verified as they are added.

Send regularly and consistently. Spammers send email in different volumes and not at set times. Be sure your email volleys are similar in size and sent at regular intervals.  “Implement a preference center so subscribers can say, ‘Actually, I only want one email a month from you, or I want every email you’re ever going to send,’” said Price. “You’ll have both types in your audience, but treating them all the same is really where people get into trouble.”

Monitor sender reputation. Sender reputation is the combination of IP reputation — the trustworthiness an IP has based on its sending history, and domain reputation — the trustworthiness of an email-sending domain based on engagement, spam complaints, bounce rates and more. It is one of the main factors mailbox providers use to determine whether messages should go to the inbox, the spam folder, or be blocked entirely. A Sender Score is a numerical representation of your sender reputation, you can check it for free at SenderScore.org.

Use BIMI to boost trustworthiness. Brand Indicators for Message Identification (BIMI) place a brand logo on your emails, This proves your emails are from a verified, trustworthy sender and are OK to open.

“There are a couple of simple things that should be top of mind, but the most basic of which is just to make sure that the content you’re sending is relevant and valuable to the audience,” said Price. “And that’s the hardest thing to solve for, but that’s what’s going to actually keep people from thinking of you as spam and from marking you as spam.”

 

 

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About the author

 

Staff

Constantine von Hoffman is managing editor of MarTech. A veteran journalist, Con has covered business, finance, marketing and tech for CBSNews.com, Brandweek, CMO, and Inc. He has been city editor of the Boston Herald, news producer at NPR, and has written for Harvard Business Review, Boston Magazine, Sierra, and many other publications. He has also been a professional stand-up comedian, given talks at anime and gaming conventions on everything from My Neighbor Totoro to the history of dice and boardgames, and is author of the magical realist novel John Henry the Revelator. He lives in Boston with his wife, Jennifer, and either too many or too few dogs.

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