Over on Email Insider, George Bilbrey of ReturnPath provides some very good advice on how senders are ultimately in control of their own ability to enjoy deliverability success. He writes, "From time to time we run into marketers who think that they have deliverability covered because they have signed up with an Email Service Provider (ESP). You've probably even seen some ESPs that are promoting their very high delivery rates. This is confusing and misleading, because the ESP fully controls only one of the five major drivers of deliverability failures."Though there is a caveat or two, this is actually very solid advice. So much of deliverability is driven by your list hygiene and send practices. But, I do believe that an ESP brings a lot to the table; empowering you to get as much of your mail delivered as possible. ExactTarget is actually pretty darn good at doing this, if I do say so myself. George explained five different things that impact your deliverability, and explained that only one of them is controlled by the ESP.
True, but simplistic. What about proactive block and bounce monitoring? Customizable blacklist alerts. Specialized reporting to review and monitor your sending reputation. Active deliverability and strategy consultation. The Big Rolodex of every ISP we've ever dealt with. Active multi-client experience, helping you understand if the deliverability issue you're facing today is really aimed at you, or if you're only in the cross hairs accidentally due to an ISP issue.
We help you translate all of this crazy data and these complex issues into plain English terms that can be easily understood so that clients can apply our best practice guidance to their day-to-day email marketing campaigns.
On the flip side of that, there's a secret that ESPs rarely reveal: ESPs are very bad at getting bad mail delivered. If you're a spammer, ISPs want to block you. No amount of "ISP Relationship Management" on the part of ExactTarget or some other ESP is going to prevent that. What we do instead, is teach you how not to be a spammer. The ExactTarget application does some of the work there; it sets you on the right track to process bounces, feedback loops, authenticate mail, and so on. But none of these things can overcome a deliverability issue caused by poor permission practices.
In that way, George is absolutely right. People are very much mistaken if they think that they are all set just because they happen to be working with an ESP. You can't discount the fact that high complaint rates, bounce rates, spamtrap hits, and content issues all play a role in your deliverability. Get these things wrong and your deliverability is sure to suffer. To that end, these are things that we help ExactTarget clients address every day, but George is right: these are all data points that refer to what is being sent and whom it is being sent to, not which ESP platform it is being sent from.
The moral of the story? I think we're both right. What do you think?
Comments for You Control Your Deliverability Reputation, but Your ESP is Critical to Ongoing Success