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Want to improve your email deliverability: here are your dos and don’ts

Email has always been, and remains, one of the most important channels for events and subscriptions marketers. Across acquisition, engagement and retention, email typically drives the most direct revenue.

Therefore, email deliverability has a material impact on your commercial performance. And if your emails are not delivered, your commercial performance will suffer.

Very simply, your #1 priority needs to be to get your emails into your recipient’s inbox, and not their junk folder. If your email lands in a junk folder, it would be registered by your martech as ‘delivered’, but the chances of this email being found, yet alone opened and clicked are very low. This will have a detrimental effect on your email engagement and ultimately your commercial performance.

This all seems like quite basic stuff, but recent changes made by Gmail and Yahoo have meant that marketers, commercial leaders and other senior executives need to make this a top priority! Email provider changes have brought in much stricter email deliverability rules, meaning much closer attention needs to be paid to email deliverability.

In addition to negatively impacting marketing results and commercial performance, one campaign at a time, poor email deliverability is likely to do serious damage to your email reputation – which is a score that indicates how trustworthy and reliable you are as an email sender.  Once your email reputation has been compromised it can be a slow and costly process to get back out of spam and junk folders and back into your targets’ inboxes.

In case you missed the changes earlier this year, it is important to note that if you send more than 5,000 emails daily, you must:

  • Authenticate your emails using security protocols like DKIM, SPF, and DMARC.
  • Implement a one-click list-unsubscribe, and honour unsubscribes within two days.
  • Maintain a spam complaint rate under 0.3% (no more than three spam reports for every 1,000 messages).

This is because chances are many of these emails are based on Gmail or Yahoo accounts – with their business name being an alias.

  1. DO: properly authenticate your emails. Email authentication helps ensure that an email sent from your domain is recognised as legitimate and not a spoofing attack. Make sure you have the following protocols in place (you should be able to get the instructions from your marketing automation platform on how to set this up):

    a) Sender Policy Framework (SPF) – allows you to specify the IP addresses or domains that can send emails on your behalf.
    b) DomainKeys Identified Email (DKIM) – standard that lets you add a digital signature to the emails you send, so that email providers can verify that an email came from you and not an impersonator.
    c) Domain-Based Messaging Authentication, Reporting and Conformance (DMARC): a security protocol that aligns your SPF and DKIM policies and defines how mailbox providers should handle an email that fails an authentication check.

  2. DO: make sure you warm up your domain when sending to lists larger than 10,000 recipients. This means sending smaller volumes to begin with, and then increasing send volumes over time. This is best practice regardless of your sending IP set up, but it is a crucial step if you have a new dedicated sending IP. Once your domain is warmed up, you can send to larger lists regularly (avoid irregular spikes in volumes).

  3. DON’T: try to trick internet service providers (ISPs) by adding new IPs for sending. ISPs could block a whole domain pool if they suspect that is what you are doing. The aim is to earn the trust of ISPs by sending consistently using the same IP/domain for a period of time while using other best practices on this list.

  4. DO: make sure you have unsubscribe options in every marketing email including one-click unsubscribe within Gmail (this should be something your marketing automation platform automatically adds to your emails and would appear as an unsubscribe button you see in Gmail before you even open the email). Preference centres can help users to feel in control of what and how often they receive communications from you – which is always a good thing!

    49% of email recipients will submit a spam complaint if the email doesn’t give them a way to unsubscribe.
    (ZeroBounce:
    Email Statistics Report for 2024).

  5. DO: consider the importance of opt-in and/or how you collected your email data. The aim is to ensure that your email is welcomed by the recipient and they do not report it as spam, and that you avoid spam traps on your database. In practice this means not emailing people who opted out, avoiding long (9+ months) breaks in email sends and ensuring the data is collected using compliant means.

  6. DO: send emails that people want to receive. You should always aim to send very relevant emails to people. If your recipients find value in the email, or the message resonates with them, they are much less likely to mark the email as spam or unsubscribe, keeping your email reputation looking good.

  7. DO: make sure your database is clean with the correct hygiene protocols in place. 

    a) This could include ring-fencing certain contacts if multiple campaigns are going out to the same ones. This will reduce the unsubscribe rate.  It is important for all those emailing your database to have visibility of the scheduling / campaigns to avoid clashes and overusing the same records.

    For 44% of people, the primary reason they unsubscribe from an email list is that the sender emails them too often.
    (ZeroBounce:
    Email Statistics Report for 2024).

  8. DON’T: keep sending all your emails to unengaged contacts. Decide what “unengaged contacts” means for your target audience and marketing efforts, and make sure you exclude these from the majority of email campaigns. You can still reach out to them every now and again, but be mindful of sending fewer emails to them. You may find that after excluding unengaged contacts, not only do your open/click rates go up, but the actual number of clicks increases because more people receive the email into their inbox and not the spam folder. Consider building an automation to deal with unengaged contacts, sometimes called a ‘sunset policy’. Identify your indicators of an unengaged contact and dynamically add these to a re-engagement campaign. If you are unable to win them back, automatically tag and segment inactive subscribers for removal or suppression. 

  9. DO: use a spam checker (such as https://www.mail-tester.com/) before sending to check for any red flags. This prevents you from sending emails likely to be caught in spam traps, thereby negatively impacting your email reputation.

  10. DO: always use pre-header text. This ensures the relevance of your email messaging is clear to your recipient, so they are more likely to open and click on your email.

  11. DO: always show a valid ‘reply to’ email address. Invalid ‘reply do’ addresses will be picked up by email providers straight away and will definitely have a negative impact on email deliverability.

  12. DO: use A/B testing to ensure the email that goes out is as strong as it can be and is more likely to be opened and clicked on.

  13. DON’T: get mistaken for spam by looking like spam.

    a) Subject lines are a key element of your copy determining open rates, ISPs are continually improving their filtering systems, and multiple components could flag the system. Go through your Junk folder and see what screams ‘spam’ to you, it’ll be things like:
    – Pushy or salesy sounding subject lines, with no value communicated.
    – Multiple emojis in a subject line.

    b) The rest of your email can also look like spam if:
    – You have too much text in your images and not enough in the body copy of the email.
    – Too many images with little text (watch your ‘image-to-text ratio’).
    – Your copy is poorly written with spelling errors or bad grammar – as often seen in scams and phishing emails.
    – You’re using link shorteners – make you look like you are obscuring where the link leads.
    – You use too much personalisation – especially if your database is not complete and accurate!! 
    – You focus on discounts in the header or near the top of the email, especially if the recipients aren’t familiar with your brand.

    78% of the participants said they mark an email as spam if the email “looks like spam”.
    (ZeroBounce: Email Statistics Report for 2024).

  14. DO: monitor your email results to identify issues early:

    a) A spam rate of over 0.1% should be investigated and corrective action taken to avoid going up to the 0.3% limit – which will result in you being treated as a spammer by the major email providers.
    b) Any unusual sudden dip in engagement rates (opens, clicks) should be investigated for deliverability issues.

  15. DO: most importantly, make sure you are using multi-channel campaigns to reach your prospects. This will ensure they’re familiar with your brand and more likely to open your email when it lands in their inbox as they would have already seen your posts and ads on social media, and your ads in their online searches etc.
  16. While many of the above tips are technical fixes and practical advice, working on your email deliverability should be considered a strategic advantage. You won’t get ahead of your competitors if their emails are arriving in your customers’ inboxes, and yours are not.

    Get in touch with Team MPG today to find out how we can help you improve your email marketing performance.
    CONTACT US TODAY

    “MPG did a great job assessing our digital marketing and marketing operations requirements – considering our business goals.  They developed a robust strategy, followed by a practical operational roadmap to help us further improve how we use technology to support marketing and sales performance. It has been a pleasure working with the MPG team!”
    Jonathan Perry, Global Marketing Director, PEI Group

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MPG Newsletter | Summer 2024

With the end of the summer fast approaching, this is the perfect time to join MPG for a refresh and reset “retreat”, so you can recharge for the second half of the year. While we can’t promise warm sandy beaches and sunrise yoga, we can promise to reground you in the foundations of marketing excellence.

Here’s your H2 check-in to see where you might need to give yourselves some extra TLC:

  • Do you have a GA4 property lurking in your account which hasn’t been set up?
  • Are you reluctant to deep-dive into the analytics because you feel less confident with the new interface?
  • Are your PPC campaigns spending money like a leaky bucket and you’re not sure where it’s going and how to stop it?
  • Do you have an all-inclusive approach to your email marketing because you’re lacking the database quality and processes for better targeting?
  • Are you asking your marketers to be all things to all parts of the business – build a brand, drive leads, grow the audience, bring in sponsors and support sales?
  • Are you commanding your spot in the market, and holding your competitors out?

In this newsletter, we will help you to determine if your digital advertising, web analytics (including GA4), and database are 5-star. By ensuring you are excelling in these key marketing areas, you can deliver first class performance across commercial partnership and audience acquisition. We’ve got cheat sheets for you to help with that too – keep reading.

On the MPG retreat, we encourage you to post your #bestmoments. If you find the below articles valuable, share them with your colleagues and networks, then sign up to receive upcoming insights straight to your inbox.

While Google extended the deadline to switch over to GA4, MPG have seen recent examples of companies who haven’t yet committed to the switch over. Over the last few months Google has created a GA4 property for all of those that hadn’t done so actively. This is your sign to take the leap into the deep blue waters of GA4.

But there’s no need to fear drowning with MPG’s 7-step guide to success.

While the terminology is different, and the interface may look unfamiliar initially, start with the same first principles i.e. define tracking objectives and key performance indicators (KPIs) to align with your business goals. With a clear focus on what you need, you can configure the measurement features across your website and registration platform. Setting up the right reporting means your team can continually monitor user journeys (and abandonments) and optimise performance of your digital properties.

#2 What every event marketer should know about PPC/Paid Media

Digital advertising is the proverbial pool lilo. It looks great once you’re floating along peacefully, cocktail in hand, knowing the return is rolling in, but blowing the thing up in the first place, let alone getting onboard, is enough to cause a splash.

Managing PPC or Paid Media campaigns requires a unique set of skills and expertise – which is why having a dedicated agency partner or specialist digital marketing team for your event campaigns is essential. More than that, handing this critical channel over to a non-event specialist is like having a puncture in that lilo – watch your PPC campaigns sink, along with your budget.

With an event offering that’s changing all the time – as speakers get added, sessions get confirmed and sponsors come onboard – you need a nimble ads approach. With MPG’s understanding of event intricacies and the unique campaign momentum changes, we’ve captured the key questions you need to be asking to drive ROI and five PPC metrics every event marketer should be paying attention to on a weekly basis.

Also of interest: Senior event leaders talked about all things PPC and Paid Media in a roundtable event earlier this year. Read their top 5 takeaways

#3 Is your database scuppering your event marketing campaign?

There’s nothing worse than not doing your research and turning up at a resort which simply ‘isn’t your crowd’. People are part of the experience. That’s why your event’s database isn’t just a list of contacts; it’s the beating heart of your event marketing strategy.

As campaigns ramp up, and the email frenzy takes hold, it never feels like you have a chance to get on top of your database. With MPG’s all-inclusive “review and recommendation” package, you can evaluate your data throughout the whole lifecycle, including data collection, storage, maintenance, governance and usage. Use our top recommendations to drive commercial performance, and follow a roadmap for implementing. Even if your mobile data fails you, you’ll no longer be lost with MPG’s guide to event database management.

#4 Marketing to grow sponsorship revenue: why it’s important and how to get it right

This post was sponsored by … #ad. You may not be a social media influencer, but senior event executives know how important sponsors are to a successful event. For many conferences it makes up the majority of the revenue target; it de-risks the event with earlier committed revenue and adds credibility, which will attract attendees.

For something so important to the commercial security of your business, there’s a strong argument for dedicating specialist resources to sponsorship marketing. Most event companies do this within their sales function, with separate sponsorship and delegate sales teams, yet they don’t replicate the same in their marketing. There’s a recognition that it’s a “different type of sale” so it follows that it’s a different type of marketing too.

Need more to convince company stakeholders? Read this blog for examples of what is important in sponsorship marketing that’s not relevant to delegate acquisition.

Also of interest: Make your case with this tried and tested methodology to achieve strong YOY revenue growth. When you see more MQLs and higher conversion rates, your argument will soon make itself. Click here.

#5 Reserve your spot [around the pool]

Just as competition is rife around the pool for the sunbeds, so too is the competition to get people to attend your event. You can’t switch off your delegate marketing. You need a 365 approach to engaging your audience.

While there might be some down-time between events, this is the time to press the reset button and tackle everything above, your GA4/analytics, your digital advertising and database hygiene because it’s back to business-as-usual before you’ve had a chance to say ‘pina colada’.

Thankfully, MPG is the malibu to your pineapple juice. With over 10 years of experience, we bring the perfect mix of marketing excellence in delegate marketing. With cross-channel experts and hundreds of integrated marketing campaigns delivered, you can sit back and relax knowing your events are in good hands.

We hope that the insights we’ve shared in this newsletter will help you take a moment to breathe and smell the sea, before making waves in your event marketing with MPG.

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Is your database scuppering your event marketing campaign?

As an event marketer, you will be familiar with the pressure of orchestrating a flawless event that leaves attendees buzzing. We want to ensure our emails look great and generate good engagement from the people who receive them. But…

  1. How can we ensure enough of the right people are on our database in the first place to feed into our email campaigns?

    and…
  2. How can we be sure the relevance, quality and completeness of the contacts we’re emailing are good enough for strong email deliverability?

Your database isn’t just a list of contacts; it’s the beating heart of your event marketing strategy.

  1. Size matters: aligning your database with attendance goals

    The size of your database should directly reflect the number of attendees you want at your event. For paid events, you can expect a conversion rate of around 1% – meaning for every 100 contacts in your database, you’ll likely secure one registration. For free events, the conversion rate is higher at 2% (1 registration for every 50 contacts), but you’ll need to account for a 50% no-show rate – so you should still assume 100 relevant records on your database will give you 1 attendee.

    It is important to bear in mind that these contact records will come from inbound activities and any kind of data acquisition. Regardless of how a contact has reached your database, it should still be included in email campaigns to promote your events. The key here is that these are relevant records and are handled well in terms of segmentation for targeted, relevant messaging – depending on demographics and behaviour of contacts.

  2. Know your audience: segmentation is key

    Understanding your audience is about demographics and behaviours that indicate two things:

    i) Relevance to your event: Are these the people you want in the room? It is important to have an event audience that delivers value for sponsors/exhibitors and makes sense in terms of peer-to-peer and buyer/seller networking.

    ii) Propensity to purchase: Have their previous behaviours indicated they’re likely buyers? Combining ‘intent’ behaviour with profile should give you a scoring system that means your nurturing and sales activities are focused on the right people.

    Relevant marcomms sent to people most likely to buy will also give your email campaigns a stronger engagement score, improving domain reputation and deliverability. So, don’t be tempted to ‘economise’ on tagging your database, and don’t be lazy about ensuring you’re creating segments for personalised, relevant email campaigns – or you’ll pay a high price in terms of poor email deliverability that may then spiral quite quickly beyond a point of no return.

  3. Quality over quantity: targeted data acquisition

    While having a large enough database is important, the quality of your data is even more critical. Ideally, you should fill any gaps in your database through targeted data research rather than relying on bulk data sources. Bulk data may come at a lower cost per record, but you’ll pay a dear price in other ways. Bulk-bought lists don’t give you strong coverage of all relevant contacts within companies in your ‘top tier’ companies – considering full decision-making units in play.

    Having high-quality data isn’t just about increasing registrations; it’s also about enhancing your email deliverability and engagement. A well-curated database elevates your domain reputation and fosters stronger connections with your audience.

  4. Timing is essential: database readiness

    To ensure a successful campaign, you’ll want to have your database in place at least 20 weeks before the event date. This lead time allows for proper segmentation, messaging development, and campaign execution, engaging your audience in the story of the event as it develops, and maximising your chances of attracting the right attendees.

  5. Extending your reach: multichannel engagement

    While your database is the bedrock of your event marketing efforts, it’s essential to complement it with other channels like PPC, an SEO-optimised website, social media and advocacy. These additional touchpoints extend your reach and contribute to overall engagement and domain reputation, further boosting your event’s visibility.

Having a well-structured, large enough and relevant database should be your #1 priority when promoting your event, alongside having a website that converts visitors well. 

So even though ‘data’ is not the most exciting part of marketing for many, ignore it at your peril! 

When MPG hires event marketers, we always look for people who see the value and importance of data and enjoy the challenge and opportunity of ensuring the data set we’re using for clients’ campaigns is getting stronger by the day. We recommend you make in-house event marketing hires with similar standards in mind!



Get in touch to find out how MPG can help you develop and maintain a powerful database to drive your business forward. For over 10 years we have been helping our clients get their data right!

“MPG are true experts in B2B marketing databases. Their approach to making sure the right data is held in a system – in the right way – is strategic, systematic, and thorough. They also understand the martech elements really well, and know how to set up a tech stack and data flows to support automated database processes. Highly recommended as an outsourced solution for getting your marketing database in good order.”
Stephanie Williford, CEO, EB Medicine

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