Spam vs Cold Email

The Mechanics of Inbox Placement

Deliverability is not magic; it is the "Infrastructure Layer" of Cold Email Engineering. Understand the protocols (SPF, DKIM, DMARC) or stay in the spam folder.

I. Email Deliverability & Authentication Protocols

The Digital Passport Control.

When you send an email, Gmail receives it and asks: "Is this sender actually who they say they are?" If your authentication records are missing, you are rejected immediately. These are not optional settings GTM teams can ignore; they are your license to operate.

Once authenticated, you must begin email warm up procedures to build trust.

  • SPF (The List): A public list of IP addresses allowed to send email for you. If a server isn't on the list, it's blocked.
  • DKIM (The Wax Seal): A digital signature attached to every email. It proves the message wasn't tampered with during transit.
  • DMARC (The Policy): A rule you set that tells Google "If an email fails SPF or DKIM, reject it." This protects your brand from spoofing.
Mailly Advantage

Auto-Throttling & Rotation. Sending 100 emails at once triggers filters. Mailly uses "Smart Throttling" to space sends over optimal windows (e.g., 2 mins apart) and rotates across multiple SMTP accounts to distribute load, blending your traffic with normal human behavior.

The SMTP Handshake

> CONNECT smtp.gmail.com
< 220 mx.google.com ESMTP
> HELO mailly-mta-01
< 250 mx.google.com bits
> MAIL FROM:
< 550-5.7.26 Unauthenticated email from try-acme.com is not accepted. Missing DMARC policy.

Status: REJECTED (Configuration Error)

The Technical Trinity: SPF, DKIM, DMARC

These acronyms are not just settings; they are your identity papers. Without them, you are a digital ghost.

SPF (The Guest List)

Sender Policy Framework. It tells the world: "Only these IP addresses are allowed to send email for mydomain.com."

DKIM (The Wax Seal)

DomainKeys Identified Mail. A cryptographic signature that proves the email was not tampered with in transit.

DMARC (The Bouncer)

Domain-based Message Authentication. It tells Google what to do if an email fails SPF or DKIM (e.g., "Reject it").

Setup Protocol

Don't guess. Getting this wrong blocks 100% of your emails. Mailly's Enterprise plan offers a Dedicated Deliverability Engineer to handle the DNS handshake for you.

II. Reputation Strategy: Dedicated IPs vs Shared IPs

Reputation is a credit score assigned to your identity by ISPs (Internet Service Providers) like Google and Microsoft. It determines if you go to the Inbox or Spam folder.

IP Reputation (The Neighborhood)

This is the reputation of the server sending the email. If you use a shared IP (like Mailchimp free tier), your reputation is affected by other users. Mailly uses high-reputation, dedicated IP pools for every customer.

Domain Reputation (The Business)

The reputation of company.com. This is sticky. If you burn your domain reputation, changing IPs won't fix it. This is why we insist on secondary domains (e.g., get-company.com).

III. Blacklist Monitoring & Evasion

You are being watched.

Independent organizations maintain lists of known spammers. Outlook and Google subscribe to these lists to filter incoming mail.

  • Spamhaus (Critical): The "Supreme Court" of blacklists. If you are on Spamhaus, your email will not be delivered anywhere.
  • Barracuda: Used by many enterprise security filters (Fortune 500s).
  • SORBS: An older, aggressive list often used by legacy systems.

Spam Traps: These blacklists plant fake email addresses on the web. If you scrape them and email them, it proves you are scraping, and you are instantly blacklisted. Mailly's Verification Engine cleans your list of known traps before sending.

Network Diagnostics

Spamhaus ZEN Clean
Barracuda RBL Clean
Invaluement Clean
Google Postmaster High Trust

Blacklist Recovery Protocol

If you land on Spamhaus, you have 24 hours to act before your domain is permanently burned. Proceed with caution.

  1. Audit Source: Use legitimate tools like Google Postmaster Tools to identify the campaign that spiked your complaint rate.
  2. Pause All Sends: Do not just "slow down." Stop completely.
  3. Delist Request: Submit a formal request to the blacklist operator explaining the remediation steps taken.
  4. The Nuclear Option: If delisting fails, the domain is dead. Use Mailly's Inbox Rotation to spin up fresh domains immediately without losing momentum.

IV. Smart Warmup Strategy

You cannot buy a domain on Monday and send 1,000 emails on Tuesday. That is abnormal behavior, and algorithms punish it. You must simulate organic growth through a structured email warm up process.

Simply buying a domain and sending emails is a guaranteed path to the blocklist. Reputation must be earned through a cryptographic process of gradual volume increase known as email warm up.

This process establishes your sender identity with ISPs before you ever launch a campaign.

View the Warm Up Protocol
Volume Ramp

V. Email Deliverability vs. The Google 0.3% Rule

Spam complaints are the new death sentence.

In 2024, Google enforced a strict spam rate threshold of 0.3%. This means if 3 out of every 1,000 people mark you as spam, your domain is burned. You cannot recover from this easily.

This massive shift means "Volume" is no longer the answer. Relevancy is the only survival mechanism. Mailly's Signal-Based Engine ensures you only email people who want to hear from you, keeping your complaint rate near zero.

Deliverability FAQs

What is a good open rate for cold email?
A healthy open rate should be between 40% and 60%. Anything below 30% indicates a deliverability issue (you are landing in Spam). Anything above 80% often suggests bot activity. The goal is consistent placement, not vanity spikes.
How do I fix my domain reputation?
Fixing reputation requires a "Cool Down" period. Stop sending cold emails for 2 weeks. Run strictly Warm-up Traffic with high engagement (replies) to signal to Google that your domain is safe again. Only restart campaigns at 10% volume.
Does cold email affect my primary domain?
Yes, absolutely. If you send cold email from your primary business domain (e.g., @company.com) and get blacklisted, your CEO's internal emails will go to spam. Never use your primary domain. Always buy secondary domains (e.g., @get-company.com) for outbound.
What is SPF and why do I need it?
SPF (Sender Policy Framework) is a text record in your DNS that lists which IP addresses are authorized to send email on your behalf. Without it, spammers can spoof your email address, and receiving servers will reject your messages to protect their users.
How to test email deliverability?
To accurately test email deliverability, you must go beyond simple "sent" statuses. Use a seed list (a group of test inboxes across Gmail, Outlook, and Yahoo) to see where your emails actually land. Mailly's Deliverability Engine automates this by constantly probing inbox placement and alerting you if a specific provider starts routing you to spam.
How to avoid email going to spam?
Avoiding spam requires a three-pronged approach: Authentication (SPF/DKIM/DMARC), Reputation (keeping complaint rates below 0.1%), and Content (avoiding spam trigger words). Mailly helps you avoid email going to spam by enforcing mandatory warm-up periods for new domains and using Spintax to ensure no two emails have identical digital footprints.

Fix Your Reach.

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SPF/DKIM Check Blacklist Scan