

If you have taken responsibility for each of those items, by owning and managing your own reputation chain, there is only one possibility: One of those items is not being well managed. How do we know this? We know because there is NOTHING ELSE that an inbox provider can look at when deciding what to do with an email except the items above. If you’re still getting poor delivery results after taking care of all the above, you probably haven’t quite nailed down the above recommendations.
AN EMAIL KEEPS GOING TO JUNK IN HOTMAIL HOW TO
You can find out more about how to get this service set up for your account here. We use a third party service for this, and there’s a small cost associated with running these tests. This is where we mail one of your emails to hundreds of test addresses at various providers and then automatically check where the email landed in each account. In order to find out if you have a widespread problem, you need to run what’s called a seed test. This can happen through no fault of your own, including the possibilities that your recipient has unusual spam filters in place, has marked your email as spam in the past, has never read an email from you, has trashed or marked similar emails as spam, and so on. It’s worth confirming if there is a larger problem because it’s extremely common for your emails to be delivered to the inbox for MOST recipients but spamboxed for a few. Often, we have clients worried about their deliverability after they get a complaint from one of their contacts who says they couldn’t find an email or found it in their spam folder. This is an important part of owning your own reputation chain. Instead, use your own custom domain so all the links in your emails are to URLs that you alone control. Tips: Here are some thoughts about the content of your emails that are worth looking at.Īlso, don’t promote Ontraport domains (members-only.online, etc.) or any other shared domains (bit.ly, etc.) in your emails.

That’s why, for example, affiliate marketers can really have challenges because, if someone sends a lot of spam to promote your URL, other senders can also end up in the spam folder for promoting the same URL. That means that if you send email that includes links which have, in the past, also been found in spammy emails, then the inbox providers will likely consider your email to be spammy also. Notably, the URLs that are promoted (linked to) in your email carry their own reputation. Figure out ways to talk about your subject without suspicious language in your emails… and keep that stuff on your website instead. That makes it hard for legitimate folks in those industries (and others) to get good delivery, but that’s just the reality. It’s pretty easy for inbox providers to decide that emails talking about losing weight and making money (for example) are likely spam. This includes the words and links you put in the body of your email.
