You can craft the perfect email with compelling content and beautiful design, but none of it matters if the message never reaches the inbox. Email deliverability - the ability to successfully deliver emails to recipients' inboxes rather than spam folders - is the foundation upon which all email success is built.
Deliverability is influenced by dozens of factors, from technical authentication to sender reputation to content characteristics. This guide breaks down what you need to know to optimize deliverability and ensure your emails get seen.
Understanding Email Filtering
How ISPs Make Decisions
Internet Service Providers (Gmail, Yahoo, Outlook, etc.) use sophisticated filtering systems to protect users from spam and malicious email. These systems evaluate:
- Sender reputation: Historical sending behavior and recipient engagement
- Authentication: SPF, DKIM, and DMARC validation
- Content analysis: Spam-like characteristics, suspicious links, etc.
- Recipient behavior: Opens, clicks, replies, complaints, deletions
- Infrastructure: IP reputation, sending patterns, technical configuration
The Reputation Flywheel
Deliverability creates a feedback loop:
- Good reputation leads to inbox placement
- Inbox placement leads to engagement
- Engagement signals quality to ISPs
- Quality signals improve reputation
Conversely, poor reputation leads to spam folder placement, which kills engagement, which further damages reputation. Breaking out of a negative spiral is much harder than maintaining good standing.
Authentication: The Foundation
SPF (Sender Policy Framework)
SPF allows domain owners to specify which IP addresses are authorized to send email for their domain. When an email arrives, receiving servers check whether the sending IP is listed in the domain's SPF record.
Best practices:
- Include all legitimate sending sources (your ESP, transactional provider, etc.)
- Use mechanisms appropriately (include, a, mx, ip4)
- End with -all (hard fail) rather than ~all (soft fail) for production domains
- Keep lookups under the 10 DNS lookup limit
DKIM (DomainKeys Identified Mail)
DKIM adds a cryptographic signature to outgoing emails, allowing receivers to verify the message wasn't modified in transit and was authorized by the domain owner.
Best practices:
- Use 2048-bit keys minimum
- Rotate keys periodically
- Sign with your own domain, not just your ESP's domain
- Ensure alignment between the signing domain and from-address
DMARC (Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting & Conformance)
DMARC builds on SPF and DKIM, telling receivers what to do when authentication fails and providing reporting on authentication results.
Implementation path:
- Start with p=none to monitor without affecting delivery
- Analyze DMARC reports to identify legitimate sending sources
- Ensure all legitimate sources pass SPF and/or DKIM with alignment
- Move to p=quarantine, then p=reject
BIMI (Brand Indicators for Message Identification)
BIMI displays your brand logo next to authenticated emails in supporting email clients. It requires:
- DMARC at enforcement (quarantine or reject)
- A verified brand logo in SVG format
- A VMC (Verified Mark Certificate) for full support
Sender Reputation
IP Reputation
Your sending IP addresses build reputation over time based on:
- Complaint rates (spam button clicks)
- Bounce rates (especially hard bounces)
- Spam trap hits
- Sending volume and patterns
- Engagement rates
New IPs have no reputation and must be warmed up gradually. Shared IPs pool reputation across senders - one bad actor affects everyone.
Domain Reputation
Increasingly, ISPs weight domain reputation heavily, sometimes more than IP reputation. Domain reputation follows your brand regardless of sending infrastructure changes.
This means you can't escape a bad reputation by switching ESPs - you need to fix the underlying issues.
Monitoring Reputation
Use available tools to monitor your standing:
- Google Postmaster Tools: Domain reputation, spam rate, authentication for Gmail
- Microsoft SNDS: Data for Outlook.com delivery
- Third-party tools: Sender Score, Talos Intelligence, etc.
List Quality and Management
The Impact of Bad Addresses
Sending to invalid or unengaged addresses damages deliverability:
- Hard bounces: Invalid addresses suggest poor list hygiene
- Spam traps: Recycled or pristine traps indicate bad acquisition or maintenance
- Unengaged recipients: Low engagement signals low-quality sending
List Hygiene Practices
- Remove hard bounces immediately
- Implement sunset policies for unengaged subscribers
- Use double opt-in for new subscribers
- Validate addresses at point of collection
- Never purchase or rent email lists
Re-engagement and Sunsetting
For subscribers who haven't engaged in 6-12 months:
- Send a re-engagement campaign asking if they want to continue receiving email
- Give a clear deadline and consequence
- Remove non-responders from your active list
It feels counterintuitive to remove subscribers, but a smaller, engaged list outperforms a large, unengaged one.
Content and Technical Factors
Content Best Practices
- Maintain a reasonable text-to-image ratio
- Avoid spam trigger words (though modern filters are more sophisticated)
- Include a plain-text version
- Keep HTML clean and well-formed
- Ensure all links are valid and not on blocklists
- Include clear unsubscribe mechanisms
Technical Configuration
- Use proper MIME encoding
- Set appropriate headers (Date, Message-ID, etc.)
- Ensure your sending infrastructure has proper reverse DNS
- Don't use URL shorteners (they're commonly abused by spammers)
Sending Patterns
- Maintain consistent sending volumes (sudden spikes raise flags)
- Warm up new IPs and domains gradually
- Spread large sends over time rather than blasting all at once
- Consider recipient timezone for optimal timing
Handling Deliverability Issues
Diagnosing Problems
When deliverability drops:
- Check authentication (use tools like mail-tester.com)
- Review bounce codes and categories
- Check reputation tools (Postmaster Tools, etc.)
- Look for content changes that coincided with issues
- Review list additions for quality issues
Recovering from Blocks
If you're blocked by an ISP:
- Stop sending to that ISP temporarily
- Identify and fix the root cause
- Clean your list of bounces and unengaged recipients
- Submit a remediation request through official channels
- Resume sending gradually with your best-engaged recipients
Proactive Monitoring
Don't wait for problems to become severe:
- Monitor daily metrics: bounces, complaints, blocks
- Set up seed list monitoring to catch inbox placement issues
- Watch for trends, not just thresholds
- Regular authentication audits
ISP-Specific Considerations
Gmail
- Heavily weights engagement signals
- Uses tabs (Primary, Promotions, Updates) for categorization
- Postmaster Tools provides valuable data
- Supports AMP for Email for interactive content
Microsoft (Outlook, Hotmail)
- SNDS provides reputation data
- Junk Email Reporting Program provides feedback
- Can be aggressive with new senders
Yahoo/AOL
- Complaint Feedback Loop available
- Reputation based largely on user engagement
- Part of Verizon Media
Conclusion
Email deliverability isn't a problem to solve once - it's an ongoing discipline. Authentication provides the foundation, but sustained inbox placement requires attention to reputation, list quality, content, and sending practices.
The good news is that ISPs want legitimate email to reach the inbox. They're not trying to block you - they're trying to block spam. By sending wanted email to engaged recipients with proper authentication, you align with ISP goals rather than fighting against them.
GetMailer includes built-in deliverability optimization with authentication setup assistance, reputation monitoring, and bounce management. We help you reach the inbox without becoming a deliverability expert yourself.
