There’s still a lot of education to be done on the topic of
buying lists, why it’s a bad idea, and why it should be avoided.
Setting aside the emotional and ethical question of whether it’s right
or wrong to buy lists, there are some very practical reasons that bought lists
will damage your ability to deliver mail successfully. Here are the top three.
1. Purchased lists are filled with bounces and invalid
addresses. If you don’t mail a list for a long time, then you mail it, it has a
very high bounce percentage. High bounce percentages are one of the measures
ISPs use to determine who’s doing something bad and should be blocked. If a lot
of your attempted mail bounces, you look like a spammer.
Whoever you’re buying the list from will claim everything is
cool and great and assure you it’s all opt-in. That might have been true at one
time (but probably wasn’t). Ultimately, though, they’re looking to sell you as
much list data as possible. They’re probably not mailing the list themselves,
just selling it to a lot of different people. If they’re not mailing, they’re
not processing and removing addresses who bounce. You buy the list, you buy it,
and boom, you have huge bounces and delivery problems.
2. Don’t forget spam traps. Spam traps are email addresses
that feed straight into spam filters. Hit just a few (or often just one) of
these, and your mail goes to the spam folder or gets blocked. ISPs take
addresses that should never be on their lists (usually common typos and forgeries)
and long dead addresses (things that have been bouncing and would not have on
your list if you handled bounces properly) and turn them into spam traps.
Even if the person you buy the list from was mailing it first, there could be
(and probably still are) spam trap addresses on those lists. The only way to
remove them is to re-engage your list. Dump inactive subscribers. Ask everyone
on the list to click on a link to re opt-in. See, spam trap addresses accept
the mail just fine; they don’t return a bounce. But they don’t open and click.
So you don’t know which addresses are spam trap addresses. And whoever you’re
buying that list from probably is not re-engaging their list – because it could
dump 90% or more of the addresses on that list as being invalid or
uninterested. That reduces the amount of data they’re able to sell you, which
is likely at odds with the list seller’s financial motivation.
3. And finally, consider recipient dilution. What is recipient dilution? That’s
where you and 900 other senders mail the same list. There have been a few
cases, with clients we’ve terminated, where I test somebody’s signup process,
and find that after about a day, they get a hundred emails from 90 different
senders. A hundred emails!
Think of how overwhelming that would be in your inbox. Do you want a hundred
emails all at once? Regular users are going to be overwhelmed and report all
those messages as spam. Your message is not going to stand out, as everybody
that list probably has a very low tolerance for messages they don’t recognize. You’ll
be just another one of the big pile of unfriendly spammers pounding the heck
out of their email account.
Or, let’s assume a different scenario. Perhaps the list owner is compiling the
list over time, and will end up sending it to different people at different
times. The recipients on this list are going to keep getting mail they don’t
recognize that people they don’t know –forever! The list will be sold and sold
and sold and sold, and if you buy it, and send to it, you’re just one of the
people making the people on that list miserable.
Can you imagine ending up on one of these lists? Even if you meant to sign up
for a list that is going to be sold 500 times – after a short while you are
going to start getting very upset. You’re getting more and more mail from
people you don’t recognize and you didn’t expect that mail and a lot of it is
mail you didn’t want. And it keeps coming and coming and coming. You know what
I call that? Spam.
ISP users will report that mail as spam. ISPs will listen to those reports, and you’ll be branded a spammer (and rightly so). You’ve got no hope of making it to the inbox when that happens.
My team and I have great relationships with ISPs. But no ISP will ever knowingly want to help
a sender doing things this way. If you want to get to the inbox, or not get
booted out of the inbox (often permanently), then you need to avoid these practices at all costs.
There are lots
of legitimate ways you can build your list. But buying a list isn’t one of
them.
