Suggest link to add to contacts for email recipients - email

I am trying to avoid going into the spam folder when I send an email to users on my website.
Mainly I need them to activate their newly registered account and if it's in the spam folder, they most likely will never activate it.
I noticed that for the most part, it's Hotmail that blocks my emails.
I read a lot that the more people mark it as not-spam, and if they add the email to their contacts, that why it increases the chances of not going to spam folders in the future.
Is there a way to offer a link for "add this email to your contacts" in the html body of the email?
Also, what can I do to not get to the spam in general? I tried stripping all the html and just send plain text but still went to spam...

To prevent your emails from going to spam can entail optimizing a number of things such as
Text of the email (even if it's plain text.. spammy/salesy wording will still trigger spam
The domain in which your sending the email from
Whether or not your sending domain is authenticated (e.g. SPF, DKIM)
Checking that your not on spam lists
What people usually do is create a link to a page which provides step by step instructions on how users can whitelist the sender in various email clients and providers.
This website will actually auto-generate the instructions page for you: http://www.emaildeliveryjedi.com/email-whitelist.php
Mailchimp offers a solution which allows you to add an 'Add-to-Address-Book' link to your campaigns but it's not very broadly compatible with all clients. What they're doing is embedded hcard microdata.
Further:
Mailchimp Add-to-Address-Book Links
hCard

I'd recommend sending a test email to http://isnotspam.com/
They run a SpamAssassin test (and a few others) on the email and give you an output, which is a good metric to judge most spam filters by.
Another thing to look out for is that GMail's doesn't like when you mention money at all, especially large amounts.

Related

What can I do for Gmail emails stop going to Spam?

I have come across different solutions for this problem, but none have worked for me. When a user registers in my website, we automatically send him a "Verify your account" email which has a button and at the footer there is a link to our website. When the user clicks the button, he is directed to our website. We're using gmail with our domain email (#mydomain.com), and we can see that over 50% of emails go directly to Spam. We have worked around a couple of solutions, but none are working. We don't want to use a service such as SendGrid.
This is how we create and send our emails (step by step)
We created an html/css email using a Zurb's template.
We used the Zurb Email Inliner to make the CSS inline.
We use the NodeMailer library to send the emails
Finally, the messages are signed using DKIM
As I've mentioned before, most emails end up in Spam. Any thoughts?
.1 First have only the DKIM is pretty much useless if you don’t also have an SPF as they work in conjunction:
Ensure mail delivery & prevent spoofing (SPF)
Generate a DKIM key for your domain
.2 Then you need to Set up an outbound mail gateway
Furthermore take not of this:
An incorrectly set Auto forwarding or routing setting. Like dual delivery or automatic responses.
Enter in the field "CC" or "BCC" when composing a message with too many email addresses at a time.
Not having the SPF and DKIM values set correctly.
Recipient addresses mark your emails as Spam, includes either a manual action or an automatic action such as a filter they have enabled or a device (very often phones) that automatically marks as Spam.
Also important to note that you shouldn’t use HTML and CSS to hide content in your messages. Hiding content might cause messages to be marked as spam. as explain in this article (and I suggest you to read it through):
.1 follow best practices for sending to Gmail
**EDIT**
I forgot to mention that you can run some test if you send email to Gmail using The Postmaster Tools
keep in mind that is only towards Gmail account, but you can open few free one for test purposes
Any other questions feel free to ask

List-Unsubscribe header doesn't show unsubscribe link in gmail

I manage an email newsletter for a customer. It uses a custom list management utility, but the emails are being delivered through SendGrid.
In order to integrate correctly with our list management unsubscribe. I'm manually creating the "List-Unsubscribe" header, with a mailto address, which goes to an email parser, and unsubscribes the user from the correct publication etc.
The email parsing etc. works fine. However for some reason gmail is not displaying the "Unsubscribe" link in the header, as it does with other newsletters I receive.
Another newsletter I manage for a different customer, uses SendGrid's built-in unsubscribe management, and for these ones gmail does display the link.
What I want to know, is why is my custom "Unsubscribe-Link" ignored by gmail, but SendGrid's works?
SendGrid's "List-Unsubscribe" looks like this ...
List-Unsubscribe: <mailto:unsubscribe#email.mycustomdomain.com?subject=http://links.mycustomdomain.com/asm/unsubscribe/*q*user_id=[SHA hash...==]>
My custom "List-Unsubscribe" looks like this ...
List-Unsubscribe: <mailto:u-[custom-encoded-user-id+publication-id]#list-management.mycustomdomain.com>
My email parser reads the incoming "to" address, and interprets the encoded user-id and publication-id, to unsubscribe the person from the correct list.
Can anyone suggest why gmail might not like my link? It's extremely difficult to find detailed information about the requirements for this header.
One obvious difference, is that mine doesn't have a subject, but that's because it doesn't need it. It gets all it needs from the "to" address. Could this actually make a difference though? Does the "to" address need to remain static?
I thought perhaps it just needed time, for gmail to familiarise itself with this newsletter. However it has been running for months, and still no link.
The list is very clean, and all recipients have opted-in. We don't get any spam reports, and very few bounces.
I've gone to a great deal of trouble to ensure that everything works correctly from my end, and it's very frustrating that I cannot find out what I need to do to make this work.
I found a similar question at the gmail forums, and the official response to that question was to "contact a professional about constructing html emails".
Not very helpful for me, as in my case, I'm supposed to be that professional.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

Google gmail quickbutton action

I'm reading about the new development of Google quick action buttons in the mail inbox.
I'm a little bit lost in this topic and not understand how I can include this function in my emails.
I have read about DKIM/SPF but I don't know if this functionality could need to do an google app.
I have my mail server with marketing segmentation and I want this button is visible when email come to client (destiny) gmail inbox (guess only works in gmail....). If i have included the markup code in html in my emails, why i can't see this button?
would it need create a specific mail application to implement this feature and send emails from this app? Someone tried this?
I know maybe this has been reply before but i think must start more down... so.. sorry.
Thanks and regards!
When you are ready to launch your marked up emails to your users, you will need to register with Google. Please follow this process:
1.Send a real-life email coming from your production servers (or a server with similar DKIM/SPF/From:/Return-Path: headers) including the markup / schema to schema.whitelisting+sample#gmail.com.
2.If you send a test/blank email, an email that does not contain schema or if you don't send an email for review your application will be silently discarded.
3.Make sure that the markup is correct prior to sending the email. For more details see Testing your Schema. Especially make sure the email passes the Email markup Tester and that there are no errors, also make sure to include as much data as possible.
4.Gmail removes all markup when forwarding an email. Do not forward the email but send it directly.
Fill out the registration form available here.
Here is the link for the documentation.
Hope this helps!!
Are you sending a promotional email (offers, etc.)?
If yes, then you are likely to be delivered to the Promotions tab, where quick actions do not work (according to Litmus - https://litmus.com/ebooks/gmail-ebook/gmail-ebook/).
Quick Actions work best in the Inbox for transactional emails.
("Here is your booking confirmation" [Check-in now] quick action)
These typically arrive directly in the Inbox.

HTML email going to spam

Not sure if this is in the right place, but it's all stemming from a PHP email send script that isn't working.
I have an email server for my clients that exists at email.thoughtspacedesigns.com. I run multiple domains from this server (e.g. pittsburghphotography.co). I've set up SPF and DKIM for these external domains, and plain text messages are going through just fine, but anything that contains an HTML attachment (even if it's accompanied by plain text) is going directly to spam when sent to any gmail account. So for example, if I send an HTML email from contact#pittsburghphotography.co, regardless of the client I use (Mac Mail, WordPress, pure PHP script), it goes into spam. I'm not sure what I can do to circumvent this issue as I've already set up just about all of the verification factors I thought were possible. Any insight?
Emails can get sent to the spam folder for a variety of reasons. Here are some things you might look into:
Every email server has a numbered rating and that can effect how your email is delivered. Check that at senderscore.org.
Another thing you might look into is if your email server is on any "Black lists" meaning that you tanked your senders score and got put on a list as a know spammer. Don't feel bad if you are, it's easy to wind up on one. Check for that at blacklistmonitoring.com.
Also, a simple way to check for spam keywords is isnotspam.com. There are other spam checkers out there but that's the one I like.
EDIT: I also forgot to mention gmail can be a bit more fickle than other email clients when it comes to spam. It's just something in their spam filtering algorithm that is more sensitive than other applications.
Best of luck!

How do you make sure email you send programmatically is not automatically marked as spam?

This is a tricky one and I've always relied on techniques, such as permission-based emails (i.e. only sending to people you have permission to send to) and not using blatantly spamish terminology.
Of late, some of the emails I send out programmatically have started being shuffled into people's spam folder automatically and I'm wondering what I can do about it.
This is despite the fact that these particular emails are not ones that humans would mark as spam, specifically, they are emails that contain license keys that people have paid good money for, so I don't think they're going to consider them spam
I figure this is a big topic in which I am essentially an ignorant simpleton.
Use email authentication methods, such as SPF, and DKIM to prove that your emails and your domain name belong together, and to prevent spoofing of your domain name. The SPF website includes a wizard to generate the DNS information for your site.
Check your reverse DNS to make sure the IP address of your mail server points to the domain name that you use for sending mail.
Make sure that the IP-address that you're using is not on a blacklist
Make sure that the reply-to address is a valid, existing address.
Use the full, real name of the addressee in the To field, not just the email-address (e.g. "John Smith" <john#blacksmiths-international.com> ).
Monitor your abuse accounts, such as abuse#yourdomain.example and postmaster#yourdomain.example. That means - make sure that these accounts exist, read what's sent to them, and act on complaints.
Finally, make it really easy to unsubscribe. Otherwise, your users will unsubscribe by pressing the spam button, and that will affect your reputation.
That said, getting Hotmail to accept your emails remains a black art.
Sign up for an account on as many major email providers as possible (gmail/yahoo/hotmail/aol/etc). If you make changes to your emails, either major rewording, changes to the code that sends the emails, changes to your email servers, etc, make sure to send test messages to all your accounts and verify that they are not being marked as spam.
A few bullet points from a previous answer:
Most important: Does the sender address ("From") belong to a domain that runs on the server you send the E-Mail from? If not, make it so. Never use sender addresses like xxx#gmail.com. User reply-to if you need replies to arrive at a different address.
Is your server on a blacklist (e.g. check IP on spamhaus.org)? This is a possibility when you're on shared hosting when neighbours behave badly.
Are mails filtered by a spam filter? Open an account with a freemailer that has a spam folder and find out. Also, try sending mail to an address without any spam filtering at all.
Do you possibly need the fifth parameter "-f" of mail() to add a sender address? (See mail() command in the PHP manual)
If you have access to log files, check those, of course.
Do you check the "from:" address for possible bounce mails ("Returned to sender")? You can also set up a separate "errors-to" address.
You can tell your users to add your From address to their contacts when they complete their order, which, if they do so, will help a lot.
Otherwise, I would try to get a log from some of your users. Sometimes they have details about why it was flagged as spam in the headers of the message, which you could use to tweak the text.
Other things you can try:
Put your site name or address in the subject
Keep all links in the message pointing to your domain (and not email.com)
Put an address or other contact information in the email
Confirm that you have the correct email address before sending out emails. If someone gives the wrong email address on sign-up, beat them over the head about it ASAP.
Always include clear "how to unsubscribe" information in EVERY email. Do not require the user to login to unsubscribe, it should be a unique url for 1-click unsubscribe.
This will prevent people from marking your mails as spam because "unsubscribing" is too hard.
In addition to all of the other answers, if you are sending HTML emails that contain URLs as linking text, make sure that the URL matches the linking text. I know that Thunderbird automatically flags them as being a scam if not.
The wrong way:
Go to your account now: http://www.paypal.com
The right way:
Go to your account now: http://www.yourdomain.org
Or use an unrelated linking text instead of a URL:
Click here to go to your account
You may consider a third party email service who handles delivery issues:
Exact Target
Vertical Response
Constant Contact
Campaign Monitor
Emma
Return Path
IntelliContact
SilverPop
Delivering email can be like black magic sometimes. The reverse DNS is really important.
I have found it to be very helpful to carefully track NDRs. I direct all of my NDRs to a single address and I have a windows service parsing them out (Google ListNanny). I put as much information from the NDR as I can into a database, and then I run reports on it to see if I have suddenly started getting blocked by a certain domain. Also, you should avoid sending emails to addresses that were previously marked as NDR, because that's generally a good indication of spam.
If you need to send out a bunch of customer service emails at once, it's best to put a delay in between each one, because if you send too many nearly identical emails to one domain at a time, you are sure to wind up on their blacklist.
Some domains are just impossible to deliver to sometimes. Comcast.net is the worst.
Make sure your IPs aren't listed on sites like http://www.mxtoolbox.com/blacklists.aspx.
I hate to tell you, but I and others may be using white-list defaults to control our filtering of spam.
This means that all e-mail from an unknown source is automatically spam and diverted into a spam folder. (I don't let my e-mail service delete spam, because I want to always review the arrivals for false positives, something that is pretty easy to do by a quick scan of the folder.)
I even have e-mail from myself go to the spam bucket because (1) I usually don't send e-mail to myself and (2) there are spammers that fake my return address in spam sent to me.
So to get out of the spam designation, I have to consider that your mail might be legitimate (from sender and subject information) and open it first in plaintext (my default for all incoming mail, spam or not) to see if it is legitimate. My spam folder will not use any links in e-mails so I am protected against tricky image links and other misbehavior.
If I want future arrivals from the same source to go to my in box and not be diverted for spam review, I will specify that to my e-mail client. For those organizations that use bulk-mail forwarders and unique sender addresses per mail piece, that's too bad. They never get my approval and always show up in my spam folder, and if I'm busy I will never look at them.
Finally, if an e-mail is not legible in plaintext, even when sent as HTML, I am likely to just delete it unless it is something that I know is of interest to me by virtue of the source and previous valuable experiences.
As you can see, it is ultimately under an users control and there is no automated act that will convince such a system that your mail is legitimate from its structure alone. In this case, you need to play nice, don't do anything that is similar to phishing, and make it easy for users willing to trust your mail to add you to their white list.
one of my application's emails was constantly being tagged as spam. it was html with a single link, which i sent as html in the body with a text/html content type.
my most successful resolution to this problem was to compose the email so it looked like it was generated by an email client.
i changed the email to be a multipart/alternative mime document and i now generate both text/plain and text/html parts.
the email no longer is detected as junk by outlook.
Yahoo uses a method called Sender ID, which can be configured at The SPF Setup Wizard and entered in to your DNS. Also one of the important ones for Exchange, Hotmail, AOL, Yahoo, and others is to have a Reverse DNS for your domain. Those will knock out most of the issues. However you can never prevent a person intentionally blocking your or custom rules.
You need a reverse DNS entry. You need to not send the same content to the same user twice. You need to test it with some common webmail and email clients.
Personally I ran mine through a freshly installed spam assassin, a trained spam assassin, and multiple hotmail, gmail, and aol accounts.
But have you seen that spam that doesn't seem to link to or advertise anything? That's a spammer trying to affect your Bayesian filter. If he can get a high rating and then include some words that would be in his future emails it might be automatically learned as good. So you can't really guess what a user's filter is going to be set as at the time of your mailing.
Lastly, I did not sort my list by the domains, but randomized it.
I've found that using the recipients real first and last name in the body is a sure fire way of getting through a spam filter.
In the UK it's also best practice to include a real physical address for your company and its registered number.
That way it's all open and honest and they're less likely to manually mark it as spam.
I would add :
Provide real unsubscription upon click on "Unsubscribe". I've seen real newsletters providing a dummy unsubscription link that upon click shows " has been unsubscribed successfully" but I will still receive further newsletters.
The most important thing you can do is to make sure that the people you are sending email to are not likely going to hit the "Spam" button when they receive your email. So, stick to the following rules of thumb:
Make sure you have permission from the people you are sending email to. Don't ever send email to someone who did not request it from you.
Clearly identify who you are right at the top of each message, and why the person is receiving the email.
At least once a month, send out a reminder email to people on your list (if you are running a list), forcing them to opt back in to the list in order to keep receiving communications from you. Yes, this will mean your list gets shorter over time, but the up-side is that the people on your list are "bought in" and will be less likely to flag your email.
Keep your content highly relevant and useful.
Give people an easy way to opt out of further communications.
Use an email sending service like SendGrid that works hard to maintain a good IP reputation.
Avoid using short links - these are often blacklisted.
Following these rules of thumb will go a long way.
I have had the same problem in the past on many sites I have done here at work. The only guaranteed method of making sure the user gets the email is to advise the user to add you to there safe list. Any other method is really only going to be something that can help with it and isn't guaranteed.
It could very well be the case that people who sign up for your service are entering emails with typing mistakes that you do not correct. For example: chris#gmial.com -or- james#hotnail.com.
And such domains are configured to be used as spamtraps which will automatically flag your email server's IP and/or domain and hurt its reputation.
To avoid this, do a double-check for the email address that is entered upon your product subscription. Also, send a confirmation email to really ensure that this email address is 100% validated by a human being that is entering the confirmation email, before you send them the product key or accept their subscription. The verification email should require the recipient to click a link or reply in order to really confirm that the owner of the mailbox is the person who signed up.
It sounds like you are depending on some feedback to determine what is getting stuck on the receiving end. You should be checking the outbound mail yourself for obvious "spaminess".
Buy any decent spam control system, and send your outbound mail through it. If you send any decent volume of mail, you should be doing this anyhow, because of the risk of sending outbound viruses, especially if you have desktop windows users.
Proofpoint had spam + anti-virus + some reputation services in a single deployment, for example. (I used to work there, so I happen to know this off the top of my head. I'm sure other vendors in this space have similar features.) But you get the idea. If you send your mail through a basic commerical spam control setup, and it doesn't pass, it shouldn't be going out of your network.
Also, there are some companies that can assist you with increasing delivery rates of non-spam, outbound email, like Habeas.
Google has a tool and guidelines for this. You can find them on: https://postmaster.google.com/ Register and verify your domain name and Google provides an individual scoring of that IP-address and domain.
From the bulk senders guidelines:
Authentication ensures that your messages can be correctly classified. Emails that lack authentication are likely to be rejected or placed in the spam folder, given the high likelihood that they are forged messages used for phishing scams. In addition, unauthenticated emails with attachments may be outrightly rejected, for security reasons.
To ensure that Gmail can identify you:
Use a consistent IP address to send bulk mail.
Keep valid reverse DNS records for the IP address(es) from which you send mail, pointing to your domain.
Use the same address in the 'From:' header on every bulk mail you send.
We also recommend the following:
Sign messages with DKIM. We do not authenticate messages signed with keys using fewer than 1024 bits.
Publish an SPF record.
Publish a DMARC policy.
I always use:
https://www.mail-tester.com/
It gives me feedback on the technical part of sending an e-mail. Like SPF-records, DKIM, Spamassassin score and so on. Even though I know what is required, I continuously make errors and mail-tester.com makes it easy to figure out what could be wrong.
First of all, you need to ensure the required email authentication mechanisms like SPF and DKIM are in place. These two are prominent ways of proving that you were the actual sender of an email and it's not really spoofed. This reduces the chances of emails getting filtered as spam.
Second thing is, you can check the reverse DNS output of your domain name against different DNSBLs. Use below simple command on terminal:
**dig a +short (domain-name).(blacklist-domain-name)**
ie. dig a +short example.com.dsn.rfc-clueless.org
> 127.0.0.2
In the above examples, this means your domain "example.com" is listed in blacklist but due to Domain Setting Compliance(rfc-clueless.org list domain which has compliance issue )
note: I prefer multivalley and pepipost tool for checking the domain listings.
The from address/reply-to-id should be proper, always use visible unsubscribe button within your email body (this will help your users to sign out from your email-list without killing your domain reputation)
The intend of most of the programmatically generated emails is generally transactional, triggered or alert n nature- which means these are important emails which should never land into spam.
Having said that there are multiple parameters which are been considered before flagging an email as spam. While Quality of email list is the most important parameter to be considered, but I am skipping that here from the discussion because here we are talking about important emails which are sent to either ourself or to known email addresses.
Apart from list quality, the other 3 important parameters are;
Sender Reputation
Compliance with Email Standards and Authentication (SPF, DKIM, DMARC, rDNS)
Email content
Sender Reputation = Reputation of Sending IP address + Reputation of Return Path/Envelope domain + Reputation of From Domain.
There is no straight answer to what is your Sender Reputation. This is because there are multiple authorities like SenderScore, Reputation Authority and so on who maintains the reputation score for your domain. Apart from that ISPs like Gmail, Yahoo, Outlook also maintains the reputation of each domain at their end.
But, you can use free tools like GradeMyEmail to get a 360-degree view of your reputation and potential problems with your email settings or any other compliance-related issue too.
Sometimes, if you're using a new domain for sending an email, then those are also found to land in spam. You should be checking whether your domain is listed on any of the global blocklists or not. Again GradeMyEmail and MultiRBL are useful tools to identify the list of blocklists.
Once you're pretty sure with the sender reputation score, you should check whether your email sending domain complies with all email authentications and standards.
SPF
DKIM
DMARC
Reverse DNS
For this, you can again use GradeMyEmail or MXToolbox to know the potential problems with your authentication.
Your SPF, DKIM and DMARC should always PASS to ensure, your emails are complying with the standard email authentications.
Here's an example of how these authentications should look like in Gmail:
Similarly, you can use tools like Mail-Tester which scans the complete email content and tells the potential keywords which can trigger spam filters.
To allow DMARC checks for SPF to pass and also be aligned when using sendmail, make sure you are setting the envelope sender address (-f or -r parameter) to something that matches the domain in the From: header address.
With PHP:
Using PHP's built-in mail() function without setting the 5th paramater will cause DMARC SPF checks to be unaligned if not done correctly. By default, sendmail will send the email with the webserver's user as the RFC5321.MailFrom / Return Path header.
For example, say you are hosting your website domain.com on the host.com web server. If you do not set the additional parameters parameter:
mail($to,$subject,$message,$headers); // Wrong way
The email recipient will receive an email with the following mail headers:
Return-Path: <your-website-user#server.host.com>
From: <your-website-user#domain.com>
Even though this passes SPF checks, it will be unaligned (since domain.com and host.com do not match), which means that DMARC SPF check will fail as unaligned.
Instead, you must pass the envelope sender address to sendmail by including the 5th parameter in the PHP mail() function, for example:
mail($to,$subject,$message,$headers, '-r bounce_email#domain.com'); // Right way
In this case, the email recipient will receive an email with the following mail headers:
Return-Path: <bounce_email#domain.com>
From: <your-website-user#domain.com>
Since both of these headers contain addresses from domain.com, SPF will pass and also be aligned, which means that DMARC will also pass the SPF check.