Before you can focus on opening rates, click through rates, catchy subject lines, etc., the first thing to focus on for an email campaign is your deliverability.
Related Blog: 3 Email Marketing Metrics to Focus on For an Effective Email Marketing StrategyEmail deliverability is the percentage of emails you send that make it to your recipients’ inboxes.
For example, if the list for your email campaign is 1,000 contacts, but the email was only delivered to 947 of those contacts, that means you have a 94.7% deliverability rate.
You may wonder: What is considered a good deliverability rate? Just like with most marketing metrics, you may find varying answers in your Google search. A good rule of thumb is 95% or higher.
The following can commonly contribute to your deliverability rate falling below 100%:
You may think: Why should I care? As long as I am getting some responses from my emails, that’s all I want to focus on. Unfortunately, that mindset will only get you so far. Email deliverability is a strict criterion that email service providers, like Gmail, Yahoo, etc., use to determine how valid your content is.
If the messages from your domain are consistently difficult for them to deliver, based on the feedback from their users such as spam complaints and high unsubscribe rates over time, these service providers may determine that you are not a healthy sender which could result in having your domain blacklisted. This means that your emails will not reach any of your recipients, even the handful who were engaging with you.
Now you may be curious what you can do to proactively stay on top of and improve your deliverability rate over time. There are a few things you can do:
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Now that you have worked so hard to improve your email deliverability, how can you maintain that over time? The key to maintaining deliverability and improving it over time is listening to the signals that are causing it to drop below 100%. If you are noticing unsubscribes, bounces, or spam complaints, review the contacts that are matching those criteria and filter them out of your email sending list. From there, you may even want to take the extra step of removing them from your database entirely.
You can also preemptively work on your deliverability by filtering people out before they unsubscribe or worse yet, mark you as spam. The level to which you do this will depend on the sophistication of your marketing tools and CRM. We use HubSpot and Seventh Sense for all of our email marketing efforts. HubSpot has a field called “sends since last engagement” that tracks how long it has been since each contact last engaged with the email content you sent them. For example, if you have sent 5 emails to one contact over the last few months, they opened the first one, but have not opened the last 4, their sends since last engagement will be 4.
You can use signals like this to decide it may be time to exclude these contacts from your email marketing for a while. Seventh Sense catalogs these unengaged senders in a different way, but through their AI technology allows you to select a button when you are scheduling an email campaign to exclude the contacts who are unlikely to engage with the email based on past behavior.