Understanding the Email Service Provider "Relationships"
I recently read a blog
post titled “Selecting An ESP With Good ISP Relationships”
the title may lead some to be mis-lead by what the author truely meant. From the title it sounds like a select few email service
providers and marketers have a magic “bat phone” line
through which they simply call recipient email services(ISP's)such as
Hotmail or YAHOO to solve delivery problems. They call their magic
number and then they are back to sending to the inbox. Although there are rare
instances when a phone call might help solve a problem with an ISP, this would be an exception far more than the rule.
Sending email servers
who get in trouble with recipient ISP's with enough
regularity to require a phone call are simply neglecting the rules of
the ISP's to such a large degree that they will not
likely have the ability to simply place a phone call and get turned
back on to send their messages through to their recipient lists.
THE MOST
IMPORTANT relationships you have is between your
email infrastructure, your reputation, and those of the ISP's. If your sending
email systems are not setup properly and abuse the policies of the
recipient email providers and those of the intended email recipients,
you'll be on the phone a lot. If your systems are secure and setup
properly, and you follow simple guidelines to keep your reputation clean you'll almost never need the telephone. A good relationship
with the recipient email crowd is based almost exclusively on proper
email system infrastructure setup, keeping bounces rare, reducing
complaints, avoiding spam traps and a dozen other very simple factors. Sadly,
these factors are missed by many senders, even if only in small part, one mistake and delivery stops. See
this telling article by marketing Sherpa, “Behind The Scenes at
Email Service Providers.”
An
excellent article by Ken Magill of Return Path goes into some more
details claiming that 97% of email sending systems are not setup
properly. Bottom line is if your with a sending email service
provider using shared IP addresses, or your email provider doesn’t
offer dedicated IP addresses, you'll eventually experience delivery
problems. Your IP address is your Web identity,
and it should not be shared with anybody for any reason. The
reputation of all senders sharing your IP address affect your
reputation. When you use your own dedicated IP you’re the only
one that affects your reputation.
Reference: Initial
Blog Post