Email Delivery Management

Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.

  • View profile for Florin Tatulea
    Florin Tatulea Florin Tatulea is an Influencer

    Brand partnership GTM Leader | LinkedIn Top Voice | Advisor

    72,652 followers

    Stop DESTROYING your company’s email domains!!! Email deliverability is a topic that continues to come up non stop… Here’s the thing all outbound teams need to understand about deliverability: Email deliverability is a “death by a thousands paper cuts” type of situation. Stop stacking paper cuts and do these 8 things: 1. Set up secondary domains If you are still cold emailing off your primary email domain you may be in big trouble. This is crucial. Using something like Maildoso makes getting these domains and the whole technical setup super fast. The last thing you want, especially if you don’t have a reputable domain like Salesforce(.)com is to burn your orgs primary domain. This doesn’t just affect your sales team. You don’t need your CS and CEO landing in SPAM. 2. Set up your DNS (DMARC, SPF & DKIM) records for ALL of your domains. To skip the manual DNS headache... Maildoso automate this setup. I set up 2 new domains in literally 1 minute. Right now we can only set up 2 mailboxes per rep in Outreach. Going to be adding a Smarted integration soon in Common Room to run higher volume experiments based on various intent signals and double down on the ones that work with human SDRs. 3. Secondary domains should link to your primary. You want to make sure your prospects are being directed to your actual company domain if they are curious and click. 4. Email Warmup - Domains should be “warmed up” for ~14 days before cold emailing. Send at least 20-30 warm up emails per day per email account, with a 40% reply rate. This builds your domain reputation. 5.  Email Volume - Build this over time. Start with 5-10 emails a day per account and do NOT send more than 30 emails per day per email account. 6. Traditionally I would have said to keep your email signature plain text. No Links. No images. No calendar links…at all. BUT Maildoso just dropped something SICK. They rebuilt Custom Domain Tracking from the ground up to make it bypass spam filters. You can now add links/images etc. Also, add your address in your signature and make sure you put a picture in your Outlook or Gmail profile. 7. Vary your cold email copy (i.e. SPINTAX). Sending the same template to every prospect signals that you are a spammer. Customize your first step email. For emails further in your sequence, use Spintax. Use alternate phrases “Hi, Hey, Hello”. New age sequencers do this automatically. 8. Understand that your domain gets TORCHED when people mark your email as spam.  Good and relevant copy matter. 9. Constantly monitor your email deliverability. Deliverability varies across Outlook and Google servers. Get a platform that helps you land in ALL inboxes. Again, Maildoso makes this super easy...  they have daily reputation monitoring built right in so you catch issues fast. They average 98%+ inbox placement - wild. Maintaining good deliverability over time is key in the success of outbound. What would the email deliverability experts add here?

  • View profile for Chase Dimond
    Chase Dimond Chase Dimond is an Influencer

    Top Ecommerce Email Marketer & Agency Owner | We’ve sent over 1 billion emails for our clients resulting in $200+ million in email attributable revenue.

    431,769 followers

    An ecommerce company recently approached my team to do an email audit as they were facing challenges with low open and click-through rates. After analyzing their email account, here are our main recommendations to revive their email marketing channel: 1. Strategic Email Segmentation: Currently, your emails lack personal relevance due to a one-size-fits-all approach. This is a crucial area to address. Action Plan: Implement segmentation based on purchase history, engagement levels, browsing behavior, and demographic information. 2. Personalized Content Creation: Generic content won't cut it. Your audience needs to feel that each email is crafted for them. Action Plan: Develop emails specifically tailored to the different segments. This includes curated product recommendations, personalized offers, and content that aligns with their interests. 3. Subject Line A/B Testing: Your current subject lines aren't doing their job. You need to be implementing ongoing A/B subject line tests, as this is low-hanging fruit to improve your open rates. Action Plan: Regularly test different subject line styles and formats to identify what resonates best with each segment. Keep track of the metrics to inform future campaigns. 4. Mobile Optimization: A significant portion of your audience reads emails on mobile devices. Neglecting this is causing a decrease in your email engagement rates. Action Plan: Ensure all emails are responsive and visually appealing on various screen sizes. Test your emails on multiple devices before sending them out. Additional Campaign Strategies We Recommend: - Launch a Monthly Newsletter: This should include new arrivals, style guides, and user-generated content. It’s an excellent way to keep your brand in the minds of your customers. - Seasonal Campaign Integration: Tailor your campaigns to align with holidays and seasons. This approach can significantly boost engagement and sales during key periods. - Re-Engagement Campaigns: Specifically target subscribers who haven't interacted with your brand recently. Offer them unique incentives to rekindle their interest. Next steps: 1. If you found this helpful, please leave a comment and let me know. 2. If you own/run/work at an Ecommerce company doing at least $1 million in annual revenue, message me so my team can audit your email channel to see if there's a good fit for working together.

  • View profile for Aquibur Rahman
    Aquibur Rahman Aquibur Rahman is an Influencer

    CEO, Mailmodo (YC S21 & Sequoia Surge) | Helping businesses get better ROI from email marketing

    32,593 followers

    If you’re sending emails in bulk (>5000 emails/day), you need to know this. In a recent update, Google laid down a threshold of spam rate for bulk senders, which is less than 0.3%. This means two things: [1] You need to monitor the no. of spam complaints regularly - Spam complaints are NOT emails landing in your spam folder [2] You need to keep your spam complaints below 0.3% - Many of the companies I know have higher spam complaints First, start monitoring spam complaints by setting up Gmail Postmaster Tools for your domain. It’s a free tool by Google to check delivery errors, spam reports, domain reputation, and IP reputation. The more important question though is how to maintain spam complaint rates below 0.3%. The answer is simple - Be more relevant and valuable to users. For that, make sure to: [a] Segment your users (Use their activity, intent, and need to segment) [b] Understand what each of these segments want (Ask them questions) Send emails that are relevant to their needs. Don’t just sell but educate, entertain, and engage them [c] Bring novelty in each email. Don’t just keep sending the same sales-oriented email every day. If you don’t have any value to add, don’t send the email. There are other requirements for senders, too, like: [1] Authenticate outgoing emails by setting up SPF, DKIM, and DMARC. DMARC may be set to p=none. [2] Enable one-click unsubscribe. And process unsubscription requests within two days. The deadline to set these up is February 1, 2024 - but they’re nudging senders to set them up already. In fact, setting these up earlier “may improve your email delivery”, the update said. For more details - read their email sender guidelines [link in comments]

  • View profile for Bill Stathopoulos

    CEO, SalesCaptain | Clay London Club Lead 👑 | Top lemlist Partner 📬 | Investor | GTM Advisor for $10M+ B2B SaaS

    18,012 followers

    If Google and Microsoft change their algorithm tomorrow, will your Cold Email campaigns survive? Most Outbound Experts don’t think about this until it’s too late. One day your emails are landing in inboxes, the next they’re in spam (or worse, not delivered at all). After months of testing, here’s what we’ve learned at SalesCaptain about keeping Cold Email campaigns alive: 1️⃣ Monitor inbox health every day Check if your inbox is in good health. If there’s a drop in performance, fix it immediately. Automation is your friend here. 2️⃣ Replace “burned” domains instantly Domains don’t last forever. When a domain gets flagged or “burned,” swap it out. ✨ Pro tip: Always have backup domains warmed up and ready to go. Don’t wait weeks to start fresh. 3️⃣ Diversify your campaign infrastructure Separate your domains, registrars, email providers, and IPs. One failure shouldn’t take down your entire campaign. 4️⃣ Validate every single email A high bounce rate will kill your deliverability. Double-check each email before sending to ensure it’s valid and active. Tools like Smartlead can help. 5️⃣ Specialized campaigns for Microsoft Microsoft emails are notoriously tricky. Use inboxes specifically designed and warmed for them. If you’re not proactively solving deliverability issues, your pipeline will suffer. But with the right approach, you can win. What’s your biggest challenge with deliverability right now? Let me know in the comments👇

  • View profile for Marisa Lather
    Marisa Lather Marisa Lather is an Influencer

    Data-Driven Brand Storyteller (aka Professional Hype Girl) | Top Voices in Marketing & Advertising | Brand Partner

    19,369 followers

    Some say email tree, but I prefer customer experience blueprints. 😊 No matter what you call them, data-driven email nurturing workflows that are based on lifecycle stage, buyer intent signals, and content engagement are a sales enablement engine—and more so, they act as a strategic lever for aligning marketing and sales to accelerate revenue outcomes. So why don't more teams prioritize them? While workflows are less visible and not as flashy, viewing workflows as living GTM assets offers a framework for operationalizing personalization at scale—something most marketers want but few actually execute well. Here are some hard truths about nurture workflows: - Most marketers know they should personalize—but execution is the tricky part. Start by auditing your user journey and mapping your segmentations, trigger logic, and dynamic content. I like the whiteboard feature in Canva or a tool like Miro for this.  - Integration is everything. Marketing can build the journey, but Sales still drives the close. Full CRM sync powers pipeline velocity, accountability, and better conversion. Sales can’t act on signals they can’t see. - Quarterly performance reviews and workflow audits are non-negotiable. Treat nurture like any other campaign: optimize regularly based on buyer behavior shifts, sales feedback, and funnel performance. What worked last quarter won’t always work next. - And let's face it, personalization at scale is HARD to do. Even the best intentions won't go far without clean data, sharp segmentation, integrated systems, and—the most overlooked—time. Are you feeling guilty because you haven't optimized your workflows yet in 2025? At least you have them. Over 65% of B2B marketers don't even have established lead-nurturing programs, which supports why 80% of marketing leads don't actually convert to sales. (gulp) But fret not, B2B marketers that implement marketing automation have reported increased sales pipelines by as much as 10%! (phew) Whether you're just getting started or ready to review, use this as your call to action to optimize opportunities you may be overlooking. Even the best-run teams can benefit from quarterly workflow audits, behavioral trigger improvements, or segmentation refreshes. If you want more, these topics were featured in Brianna Miller's article for MarTech, "How data-driven email nurturing transforms the B2B sales funnel". I really like this article because it bridges theory to execution and reminds us that nurturing your customers isn't a one-and-done, it's a mindset. Check it out here: https://lnkd.in/gGqn2j8v #B2BMarketing #LIPostingDayApril #EmailMarketing

  • View profile for Frank Sondors 🥓

    I Make You Bring Home More Bacon | CEO @Forge | Unlimited LinkedIn & Mailbox Senders + AI SDR | Always Hiring AI Agents & A Players

    33,175 followers

    Cold email outreach is often misunderstood as a numbers game - send more, get more. But the truth is, quality always beats quantity. Your success largely depends on the quality of your email list. A well-curated list means you’re reaching the right people with the right message, while a poorly managed list can lead to low engagement, high bounce rates, and damage to your sender reputation. Here’s a few key steps to refine your cold email lists for better results: 1️⃣ Segment your audience: start by dividing your list into segments based on criteria such as industry, job title, company size, or previous interactions with your brand. 2️⃣ Regularly clean your list: over time, email lists can become cluttered with inactive or invalid addresses. Regularly clean your list to remove bounced emails, unsubscribes, and unengaged contacts. This not only improves your deliverability rates but also ensures you’re focusing on prospects who are more likely to engage. 3️⃣ Use data enrichment tools: tools like Clearbit, ZoomInfo, or Hunter.io can help you enrich your email list by adding valuable data points such as the prospect’s role, company details, and social profiles. This extra information enables you to personalize your outreach even further. 4️⃣ Monitor engagement metrics: pay close attention to open rates, click-through rates, and responses. If certain segments of your list are underperforming, it may be time to re-evaluate those contacts. Use these insights to continuously refine your list and improve your targeting. 5️⃣ Leverage intent data: incorporate intent data into your list-building process. This data shows which companies are actively researching solutions like yours, allowing you to target prospects when they’re most interested. Tools like Bombora or 6sense can provide these insights. If you do something extra special to your email lists, share below 🤓 #Sales #ColdEmail #EmailMarketing #Outreach #SalesStrategy

  • View profile for Suzanna Chaplin
    Suzanna Chaplin Suzanna Chaplin is an Influencer

    CEO/Founder at esbconnect | Built esbconnect to Help Brands Acquire, Convert & Scale | 1BN+ Emails Sent for 600+ Consumer Brands | 17m Email Community | Passion for Performance and data-led acquisition

    4,919 followers

    Retention Isn’t Sexy - Until You’re Broke Brands chase growth. But when the faucet turns off and the market tightens, email becomes your backbone. So why do we treat it as a short-term fix rather than a long-term asset? I hear this conversation replayed to me all the time from CRM and Brand Managers: Their Manager: Targets are down. Budget’s gone. Just send more emails. CRM: We already sent one this week with a promo. Manager: Send another. Bigger discount. CRM: Unsubscribes were high last time… Manager: Send to everyone — even non-engagers. Add urgency. And so it begins. 📉 Deliverability drops. 📉 Clicks tank. 📉 Unsubscribes rise. 📉 The database - your only owned audience - starts eroding. But the revenue target stays the same. This is what happens when you treat email like a faucet you can turn on and off — instead of a system you build and respect. 💡 Want to break the cycle? Here’s how smart brands avoid the spiral: 1. Build an acquisition engine, even when times are good. Don’t just chase sales. Chase subscribers, on all channels, not just site pop-ups. If 2% of traffic buys, aim for 20% to subscribe. That’s your future revenue. 2. Agree on discounting guardrails. Not every campaign needs a percentage off, even if times are tough. Consider other conversion tools like: - loyalty perks - free gifts - tiered basket incentives - competitions - outlet-style categories 3. Treat non-converters as humans, not dead weight. Reduce frequency, but stay visible. Try to understand why they’re lapsing e.g gift buyers? Promo-only? Seasonal? 4. Use peak trading to re-acquire, not just sell. Black Friday can re-engage lapsed customers. But the follow-up can’t be more noise. Build a new journey. Reset the relationship. 5. Track long-term metrics. Not just revenue-per-send. Show your management week on week how these are growing: -LTV - Repeat purchase rate - AOV - Site visit frequency from consumers on your database 6. Invest in content, not just campaigns. Nurture a community. Give them reasons to stay subscribed. Boost engagement before you ask for a sale. Remember nobkdy going to buy daily and weekly, you need more to keep them engage. Think weekly style tips, news Roundup, podcast drops, games, polls etc Email can be your safety net — but only if you protect the list, grow it intentionally, and stop burning it out with knee-jerk sends. Want to find out our playbook for growing your subscriber base rapidly. (like how we grew out base to 17m). DM me. Build it right. Because when things get tough, it’s your email list that keeps the lights on.

  • View profile for Arpit Singh
    Arpit Singh Arpit Singh is an Influencer

    GTM, AI & Outbound | LinkedIn Content & Social Selling for high-growth agencies, AI/SaaS startups & consulting businesses | Open for collaborations

    35,590 followers

    I’ve sent over 100,000 cold emails (and I learned the hard way). 45% failed because the copy isn’t good enough, or the email never reaches the inbox. That’s why you need both: 1. Copy that gets replies 2. A system that ensures delivery Here’s my 7-step framework to write cold emails that actually get responses: 1. Get crystal clear on your ICP “Founders” is not an ICP. “SaaS founders at $2–10M ARR, hiring SDRs” is. The narrower you go, the stronger your message. 2. Subject line = half the battle 47% of recipients open based on it alone. Examples that work: → “Scaling SDR hiring?” → “Quick note on your Series A round” Keep it under 60 characters. Curiosity-driven, not clickbait. 3. First line > small talk “Hope you’re doing well” kills momentum. Better: “Saw your team just crossed 50 employees—congrats. Curious how you’re managing outbound at that scale?” 4. Keep it under 120 words Data shows 50–125 words = highest replies. One email = one idea. If you need more space, the positioning isn’t sharp enough. 5. Write like a human Short sentences. Simple words. Conversational tone. If you wouldn’t say it in a coffee chat, don’t write it in an email. 6. Call-to-Value, not Call-to-Action “Can we hop on a quick call?” is about you. “Would it help if I showed you how [peer company] cut reply times in half?” is about them. People don’t buy calls. They buy outcomes. 7. Follow-ups make the difference 70% of replies to cold emails come from follow-ups. Most reps stop after 1–2 emails. Big mistake. Change the angle each time…new benefit, proof point, or case study. The framework gets you replies. But scaling it consistently? That’s where most teams fall short. → Staying out of spam filters. → Keeping sequences human. → Testing which subject line actually works. → Managing dozens of replies without losing track. That’s exactly where Saleshandy makes the difference: → Find what works faster with subject line + copy testing → Scale with reply-based sequences that feel personal → Stay out of spam with inbox placement tests → Manage replies in one AI-powered inbox Because at the end of the day: Good copy gets replies. Saleshandy gets it delivered. 👉 Try it out here: https://lnkd.in/dtGtKYUR What’s the most underrated cold email tip you’ve learned from experience?

  • View profile for Swati Paliwal
    Swati Paliwal Swati Paliwal is an Influencer

    Founder - ReSO | Ex Disney+ | AI powered GTM & revenue growth | GEO (Generative engine optimisation)

    35,458 followers

    Maintaining a bloated subscriber list filled with unengaged contacts can severely hinder your email marketing performance. Engagement trumps numbers any day. But why purge unengaged subscribers? 1. Enhanced deliverability:  → Email service providers monitor engagement metrics. → A high volume of unopened emails can flag your content as spam, reducing inbox placement. 2. Cost efficiency:  → Many email platforms charge based on subscriber count. → Removing inactive subscribers can lower costs, allowing you to allocate resources more effectively. 3. Accurate analytics:  → A refined list ensures that your open & click-through rates reflect genuine interest, providing clearer insights into campaign performance. Here are a few actionable steps: a. Identify inactivity:  → Define what constitutes an inactive subscriber for your business— e.g., no opens or clicks in the past 90 days. b. Re-engagement campaigns:  → Before removal, attempt to rekindle interest with targeted emails offering value or asking for feedback. c. Regular maintenance:  → Schedule periodic list clean-ups to ensure ongoing engagement & list health. By proactively managing your subscriber list, you: → Protect sender reputation → Enhance engagement → Ensure your messages reach those who truly value them How often do you audit your email list for engagement? Drop your strategies in the comments below.

  • View profile for James Buchok

    CEO of Tention Marketing | Over $15M generated through email and SMS marketing

    1,244 followers

    Your emails might not be reaching the inbox - here’s how to fix it Most brands don’t realize they have a deliverability problem until it’s too late. You’re still sending emails. You’re still seeing opens. But behind the scenes? More emails are landing in spam or promotions. Here’s how to protect your inbox placement: 📡 Sending Reputation – ISPs (Gmail, Yahoo) score you based on engagement. ✔️ Warm up new domains, avoid sudden volume spikes. 🛠 Authentication (SPF, DKIM, DMARC) – Without these, providers don’t trust you. ✔️ Set up proper records & align them correctly. 📩 Inbox Placement ≠ Open Rate – A 25% open rate doesn’t mean you’re in primary. ✔️ Test with tools like MailGenius or GlockApps. 🚀 Volume & Frequency – Sending too many emails too fast kills reputation. ✔️ Scale volume gradually & stay consistent. 💀 Dead Weight on Your List – Low engagement signals providers to filter you. ✔️ Suppress inactive subscribers after 90-120 days. Email isn’t just about what you send - it’s about whether it even gets seen. When’s the last time you checked your inbox placement? If you’re not monitoring it, you’re flying blind... #emailmarketing #ecom #ecommerce

Explore categories