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Tune up Your Email Newsletter to be Compliant with Anti-Spam Filters
In this article well continue talking about how to create a healthy email
message and give a few tips how to survive anti-spam filters. Anti-spam filters
catch every incoming email before it is delivered into the inbox and review it.
They use a scoring system to classify an email as spam or legitimate. These
filters (you might have heard about SpamAssassin, SpamProbe, or
SpamCombat) look for certain patterns in the message, and assign "spam
points" to it based on certain criteria: words, phrases, or even colors.
Depending on what these filters find or dont find in the message, points
are added to or taken away from a scoring system. If the message score is 5.0 or
higher, the filters add the *SPAM* word to the subject line of the message and
the email is redirected to a bulk or junk mailbox. The lesser the score the
better.
So, one of the main concerns when writing an email newsletter is to ensure that
it is structured in a way that will allow it pass this test. Ill go to the
point and give you a few tips you may follow:
1) Check what you put in the subject line
The subject line is one area of your e-mail that is carefully examined. For
example, if you type a recipients name in the message subject like To:
[recipients name], your message will get 2.86 points because of this. If there
is a lot of white space in the subject line, the email gets 2.64 points added to
the score. The word FREE written in caps weighs additional 1.10 points.
If you put a date into the subject line, you can take off 0.48 points. And you
can take one full point off if your subject contains a newsletter header!
2) Keep your message size from 20K to 50K
The size of the message does matter for anti-spam filters. The majority of spam
emails are less than 20K. So, you can actually get 0.71 taken from your score if
your message in within the 20K to 50K range.
3) Be wise with CAPS
If you use too many capital letters in your message, youll get 0.21 points
added to your score. So, use them wisely!
4) Use full hyperlinks
If you use a hyperlink in your email, make sure you put the http:// at the
beginning. A spam filter will add 1.28 points to your emails if you dont!
5) Be restrained with colors
Different colors do matter too. Blue adds 0.21 points, red 0.33 points, and
Magenta 0.44. The background color other than white adds 0.317 points to the
message score. The Black is optimum as it wont add or take any points off.
6) Be a welcome guest
Send your recipients an e-mail after they have opted in at you site, and have
them confirm that yes, you have permission to send the newsletters to them. This
will help in the case if you need to prove you are not spamming, and that people
want to receive the emails from you.
Have your recipients add you to their address books or white lists and your
messages wont have to pass through anti-spam filters.
7) Beware of Blacklists!
Blacklists are databases of known spammers that ISPs regularly check. You may be
added to a blacklist without you knowing it if one of your recipients clicks on
the this is spam button. If you are blacklisted, contact the server provider
immediately.
8) Test your message
Use a spam checker to test your message before you send it out to the world.
A message content checker can help locate potential problems prior to
distribution. It runs your receiver and sender addresses, subject line, and
message content past a collection of rules. It then reports the result and tells
you whether your message is likely to be filtered. Most checkers suggest a score
of 5.0 will get your email sent to the spam scrap heap. One of our favorite free
checkers is the Lyris' Content Checker. Lyris ContentChecker filters your
message through several hundred Spam Assassin tests to determine if it has
characteristics typical of unsolicited "spam" mail. Just fill in the blanks,
including your email text or the full HTML coding, and submit it. You'll get an
instant score on the next screen and a more detailed report by return email.
This report highlights the factors used to evaluate your message, and may help
you to make further improvements to it.
9) Dont use the spammers e-mail software
Anti-spam filtering systems are aware of some of the favorite email programs
that professional spammers use and they add on as many as 3 points if you send
the messages with those program. Be sure to check the ISPs hit list to see
what email software are on it.
Remember that the anti-spam filters are not perfect and they often happen to
be over protective. They can give the false negatives and false positives
results after the message analysis. A false negative is when a pure spam email
gets through the filter, and a false positive is when a legitimate email ends in
the junk box flagged as spam.
Around 150 companies now offer spam filtering software. The number of anti-spam
techniques is growing and anti-spam technology is getting smarter too.
For example, some servers (challenge systems) send an email back to the original
sender and require a reply before they forward the email to the recipient. The
idea behind this is that only a human can reply to a request for specific
information.
America Online recently announced a new spam filter that can actually learn
the preferences of each of their subscribers.
Did you find those tips useful? You can learn a lot more in the "Ultimate
HTML Email Guide":
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The guide covers nearly everything you need to know about:
- designing HTML emails for web-based email services
- simple layouts that work best
- testing & delivering HTML emails
- segmenting & personalizing emails
- common mistakes & how to avoid them
- new ways to build your list fast & maximize your list
response rate
- amazing list offer secrets
You can
download the ebook
here |
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