How to Avoid the Spam Filter and Get Into the Primary Inbox 👉🎁❤
One of the biggest challenges for email
marketers over the years has always been beating the spam filter. The job of
the spam filter on most email providers is to prevent unwanted messages from getting
in – especially those that might contain viruses, phishing scams or other
harmful types of content.
Today this has become even harder though.
Now we not only have spam boxes but also ‘social’ and ‘promotional’ boxes that
further segregate our messages and make it hard for any of our messages to gain
attention.
The good news is that there are strategies
you can use to combat both these
issues. Read on…
Language
One of the first and most important tips
for avoiding the spam box is to make sure you avoid using the kinds of words
and phrases that computers associate with spam. This is similar to the way that
Google looks for keywords, except this time the keywords are a bad thing. Examples of words to avoid
include things like ‘buy’, ‘free’, ‘discount’, ‘hurry’ and ‘Viagra’. Hopefully
that last one isn’t something you would be writing about anyway!
Structure
If you want to get into the main inbox,
then it is not enough to ‘not look like spam’ – you now need to also ‘look like
a personal message’.
To do this, you should take advantage of
the feature in your autoresponder that allows you to use the recipient’s name
in the message. Likewise, try to structure your message more like a
conventional email. That means saying ‘Dear [Name],’ and ending with ‘Best regards,’.
Likewise, you also need to avoid including
elements that a client will associate with a promotional image or that will
make you look less like a genuine
correspondence. That means avoiding using too many hyperlinks – keep it to just
one – and it means avoiding using big images.
Sender
Reputation
The most important thing to do though, is
to make sure that you are focussing on delivering great value over time. If you
do this, then people will open your messages and they will actually read them. This will help to improve
your ‘sender reputation’, which in turn will mean you don’t get blacklisted.
And while you’re at it, why not ask your
readers to ‘white list’ your messages and add them to the main inbox? Sometimes
the best solutions are the simplest ones!
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