The Surprising Things That Impact Your Email Deliverability episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 19, 2022 · 27 MIN

The Surprising Things That Impact Your Email Deliverability

from The Email Marketing Show

How do you improve your email deliverability? What can damage your sender's reputation? How can you make sure your emails land in your subscribers' inboxes?We're Kennedy and Carrie, and we're here to share the truth about all the surprising things that affect your email deliverability so you can have better results.Ready?SOME EPISODE HIGHLIGHTS: (0:33) Want to carry on with the conversation? Join our FREE Facebook group. (2:21) What is 'email deliverability'? (5:06) The technical things that impact your email deliverability. (7:40) Using too many images. (9:49) More reasons for not using too many images in your emails. (13:55) Having little or no engagement with your emails. (16:26) Using 'spammy' words. (21:00) What can you do to improve your email deliverability? (23:03) Keep your list clean.(24:57) Subject line of the week.[podcast_subscribe id="7224"]What is 'email deliverability'?Let’s say this first - nothing will affect your deliverability like not sending enough emails! You can only improve your email deliverability if you send emails! No one gets them if you don’t send them, right?With that said, when we talk about deliverability, we refer to the ability to get your emails into people’s primary inboxes so they can see them, open them, and click the links inside them to go and buy your products and services.You can put great effort into learning how to write great emails with effective subject lines. But if your emails end up in people’s spam folders or are blocked altogether, you won't get any results with your email marketing. You need to ensure that your emails are delivered. So we're sharing the email best practices for you to bake into your everyday processes to improve your deliverability.For this, we assume the people on your email list have chosen to be there. This means you haven't gone onto the Internet and scraped email addresses or bought an email list illegally. The premise of this advice is that you do the same email marketing we do - i.e. opt-in, permission-based marketing. In other words, someone’s seen a good reason (such as a lead magnet) to join your email list, and they've voluntarily given you their email address and permission to send them emails. Because if not, when people start receiving emails from someone they don't know, they'll be quick to hit the spam button.The technical things that impact your email deliverabilityBefore you start emailing people, there are a few technical parameters you need to set up regardless of how big your list is or what niche you’re in. These are:SPF (Sender Policy Framework).DKIM (DomainKeys Identified Mail).And DMARC (Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting, and Conformance).We’re not going into detail, but we suggest you research how to set them up or hire someone to do it for you. All you need to know is that setting these values up helps validate your reputation as a sender to ensure your emails are delivered securely and consistently. These parameters verify you can legitimately send emails from your website. They're measures that exist to protect people, so don't skip this step.If you’re in our Facebook group and have any doubts, come and ask. And if you are inside our programme, The Email Hero Blueprint, we have tech calls where we answer these types of questions.So what else impacts your email deliverability?1. Using too many imagesThings such as using large images or GIFs in your emails might impact your deliverability. But that's if you use them all the time. Think of deliverability as a scoring system. Doing something 'wrong' occasionally doesn't mean your email marketing is doomed! Most of the time, you'll be fine. You won't be immediately blacklisted and put in Gmail jail. Using images or GIFs here and there isn't going to hurt your deliverability if you're otherwise getting good engagement.However, regularly putting lots of massive images in your emails (especially if they’re not compressed and end up being sent as attachments) isn’t great for your deliverability. For the most part, you want your emails to be text and links. And this isn’t just for email deliverability. It’s also (and mainly) because emails that are sent by people don’t have lots of graphics or heavy layouts – that’s what business emails look like. We want to fall into the category of personal relationships here. We want our subscribers to focus on what we mean by the words we use in the emails – not the images.More reasons for not using too many images in your emailsAnother reason not to use too many images is that you don't want people to disconnect from your message because of the images you use. Say you’re telling a story about an awful chair, and you attach a photo of it. Someone who might have the same chair (or happen to like the image of the one you shared) might be offended and not connect with what you're sharing. Instead, you want people to use their imagination and decide for themselves what ‘an awful chair’ looks like. Let the words paint the pictures for you.Also, if you’re an e-commerce business that sells products, for example, you don’t want to put photos in your emails. The goal is for people to click on the links inside your emails, go to your website, see your products, and buy from there. Your emails have the job of getting people to click on your links. And people clicking on your links is a great indicator to Gmail that your emails generate engagement. So don’t give them everything in the email because if you do, they have no reason to click!An exception to that rule (and one we sometimes use) is to put a preview image of a video in an email that tells people that by clicking on a link, they’ll be taken to a page where they can watch a video. In that preview image, we’ll often include something curious like a thumbnail or an animated GIF. But that doesn’t take away from driving the click.Using images can also become a noble obstacle. If you’re waiting to publish an email because you first need to find the perfect image and then resize it etc., you may never send that email. And messy action is better than no action! So reduce friction wherever you can. Tell the story you want to share in the email, and let the sales page do the rest. Every additional thing you put in there can get in the way of people taking action.2. Having little or no engagement with your emailsThe next thing that affects email deliverability is the engagement of your emails. Are people paying attention? Are they opening your emails, clicking on the links, and replying?Opening emails is a good sign to Google – it shows people are there and taking some form of action. But people clicking on the links in your emails is a stronger engagement signal. It tells Google that your subscribers are interested in what you do - your emails must be good!The next best thing is people replying to your emails – that shows a greater level of human engagement. And while it's harder to get people to do this, forwarding your emails is an even better engagement signal. It tells Google that your content must be of great quality.Something we do in our Super Signature at the bottom of our emails is to say something along the lines of “If someone forwarded this to you, make sure you also get the next email”. This plants the seed in the readers’ minds that they can forward your email to someone else if they find it valuable. It's also useful because you're telling people what the next step is - what do you want them to do now? If you want people to forward your emails, tell them. Because inherently people want to be helpful - they just don't know what's useful to you.You can't generate engagement if you’re not emailing consistently or frequently enough. If you only show up out of the blue when you have something to sell, people are going to see through that. So don't be that person! If you haven’t sent emails in a while, don’t overthink it – just jump back in.[thrive_leads id='8822']3. Using ‘spammy’ wordsAnother factor that may negatively impact your deliverability is using words and phrases that are picked up by scam software. A lot of email platforms automatically do spam checks. For example, we use Keap, and certain words and phrases are highlighted as spam. It might surprise you, but “Netflix” is one of them! So it's not just your traditional 'naughty words'. If people mark emails as spam, and those emails have particular words or phrases in them, Gmail starts to pick them up as 'spammy'.However, let’s not forget deliverability works like a scoring system. If you generally have great engagement and a clean list, the occasional 'spammy' word isn’t going to hurt your deliverability. If you have a low spam score, you could, for example, get away with using the word “free” in a subject line with no issues. Think of your email marketing relationship with your audience as a friendship or even a...

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This episode is 27 minutes long.

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This episode was published on January 19, 2022.

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How do you improve your email deliverability? What can damage your sender's reputation? How can you make sure your emails land in your subscribers' inboxes?We're Kennedy and Carrie, and we're here to share the truth about all the surprising things...

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