Anyone specializing in email marketing on either the Brand or Agency side knows the importance of sender/domain reputation. A bad domain reputation can have severe consequences for your email marketing campaigns. Here are some of the key consequences:
Let’s dive into how to maintain a good sender/domain reputation. It starts with SPF (Sender Policy Framework), DKIM (DomainKeys Identified Mail), and DMARC (Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting, and Conformance). These play significant roles in email authentication and security to keep your database healthy.
SPF and DKIM are internet protocols that ensure:
However, they both do it in different ways.
How SPF works:
The Domain owner creates an SPF record in DNS (Domain Name System). The SPF record is a list of authenticated IP addresses that are allowed to send emails on behalf of that domain. Once an email is sent from a domain with an SPF record, the Recipient server validates the Sender IP address with the SPF record and checks if it’s an invalid list of authentic senders.
If validation fails due to the address not being listed in the SPF record or misconfiguration and SPF authentication, the recipient server will tag the email as suspicious and reject it.
How DKIM works
While sending an email, the Sending server generates (and adds) a unique digital signature for the content. The signature is created using a private key specific to the sender’s domain. The sender domain also posts a public key in its DNS records so that the recipient server can retrieve the sender’s public key from the DNS record based on the sender domain.
The recipient server will decrypt the public key and verify a digital signature, matching will ensure the message has not been altered during transmission and the sender’s domain.
How these help your Email marketing efforts:
DMARC (Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting & Conformance) is an email authentication protocol that helps protect domain reputations and combat email spoofing and phishing attacks. Here’s how DMARC helps:
By implementing DMARC, email senders can enhance their domain reputations, improve email deliverability, and protect their brands from potential spoofing and phishing attacks. It’s an essential part of a comprehensive email authentication strategy, alongside SPF and DKIM, and is widely adopted by major email providers and organizations.
Bad sender/domain reputation can have severe consequences for email marketing campaigns. To avoid these, it’s crucial to maintain a good domain reputation by following email marketing best practices, monitoring your domain’s reputation, and addressing any issues promptly.
To maintain a strong reputation, email marketers should follow best practices such as:
By prioritizing sender and domain reputation, email marketers can maximize inbox placement, deliverability, and overall effectiveness of their campaigns.