How to Avoid Spam Filters When Sending Emails

How to Avoid Spam Filters When Sending Emails
Melissa Williams
Melissa Williams

Melissa Williams

8 min read0 reads

When you press “send” on an email, you can’t just assume it will reach an inbox. One out of four American business emails was marked as email spam or went missing in 2015.

That’s an 11% drop in email deliverability from 2014. Email spam filters are tightening their scope and people are losing tolerance for unsolicited emails.

What this means for you:

When you’re writing emails and compiling lists, 25% of your effort is going to waste.

To help you rise above the average sender’s open rates, here are 10 reasons why emails get marked as spam, and how to fix each. Take notes.

mailEmail tracking in your inboxFind out if your emails are making it to the other side

Why Automatic Email Spam Filtering Happens

#1: Your Subject Line Includes a Spam Trigger Word

Sometimes the words you choose are what’s keeping you from reaching your prospect.

This applies most to your email subject line. Words like “free,” “money,” “help” and “reminder” all trigger content-based email spam filters. Especially if you’re not added as a contact in your recipient’s email database.

Here’s a more complete list of email spam trigger words:

email-spam-trigger-words

Want even more? Here’s a list of 200 common spam words.

The takeaway: Keep this list by you as you type your emails to avoid using these words. You can bookmark this web page or print it out for your desk.

If there’s a word that you need to use, keep it out of your subject line.

#2: Your Email Has All Caps

IF YOU WERE A FISH, WOULD YOU SWIM RIGHT INTO A NET?

We didn’t think so. Using all caps in an email is game-over just the same.

 dont-swim-into-email-spam-filters

This one’s that simple.

#3: Your Email Has Exclamation Points

How excited are you about avoiding email spam filters?!?!?!

Like emails with all caps, emails with exclamation points are food for spam catchers. Especially when they’re in the subject line.

Because messages with exclamation points resemble true spam emails looking to scam recipients, they are treated the same by email providers. They’re filtered from inboxes.

It’s the similarity principle. In this case, people have set systems to group emails based on similarities that they have.

Here’s how an email that’s fallen victim to a spam filter shows up in the dark depths of a recipient’s spam folder:

email-spam-notification

The takeaway: No exclamation points in your subject lines. When you have a minute, also take a look through your own “Spam” folder for patterns to avoid in your own emails.

#4: You’re Using Attachments

Sending an email with an attachment to someone who’s expecting to hear from you (i.e. someone who has you in their Contacts) is okay to do. I’m sure you’ve done it plenty of times without a hitch.

It’s sending an email with an attachment to a new, cold contact that causes an issue. Remember the similarity principle above? Same applies here.

True spam emails often contain destructive attachments, so spam filters supervise (and remove) emails with attachments.

The takeaway: When you’re writing a cold email and you’d like to include a case study or piece of sales collateral, do so with a link rather than an attached doc.

The benefit: you can track the link to see if they open it. And if it’s a multiple-page PDF, tools like Yesware allow you to actually track how long your recipient spends on each page.

And now (drumroll…) I am going to show you examples of all four above spam triggers in action,  wrapped into a small snapshot of my “Spam” folder:

email-spam-example

#5: Your Email Image to Text Ratio Is High

Messages that are overly graphic will not reach your recipient. Salesforce says so. Your email needs to be more than just an image or many images with little text.

Note: The common rule of thumb used to be to maintain a 60/40 text-to-image ratio. But recent research from Email on Acid shows that restrictions like this depend on the length of an email.

Their findings:

  • Emails less than 500 characters should contain a supporting image

  • Emails over 500 characters are not significantly impacted by image/text ratio restrictions

To give you an idea of what a 500-character email would look like, this message is exactly 500 characters (with spaces).

Emails of this length are typically 5 to 7 sentences long. They give you enough room to introduce yourself in the email, describe why you’re reaching out plus what value you offer, and then request something. Just like that.

Because sales emails today are kept short in order to draw a prospect’s attention, keep it, and quickly drive action, they often fall within this 500-character range.

The takeaway: Emails with a graphic and no text just about guarantee your email will never see the light of day on the other side.  If your email is at or under 500 characters, A/B test it. Use a bulk email tool to split up your recipient list into two. Send the first batch a version with an image, and the second a version without an image. Track campaign performance to see if you have higher opens with one versus another. (Most email platforms don’t measure email spam rates, so you have to infer spam rates from open rates.)

You can also try a free tool like mail-tester to audit your email before sending.

ab-testing-email-mantra-always-be-testing

#6: Your Email Has Different Colored Fonts and/or Styles

Live life colorfully, but not in your outreach emails to cold contacts.

Here’s an example of an email that’s definitely spam-bound.

email spam example two

Email spam filters look for variations of colors and font styles as a first flag for removal.

The takeaway: Keep it simple. For each email you send, use no more than 3 font styles/colors total. Don’t forget: hyperlinking a page on your website and bolding your ask gets you up to two.

#7: Low Open Rates

Webmail providers like Gmail are increasingly using recipient engagement to classify an email as spam or not. It’s called “Engagement-Based Spam Filtering.” They identify when a user deletes unopened emails from senders, and begin to filter out these emails from reaching the inbox in the first place.

The takeaway: If you’re sending emails to someone over and over without any opens, then stop. It’s a wasted effort. Use an email tracking tool (Yesware offers a free trial) to see whether emails sent from your company account are getting opened.

“When you find yourself spinning your wheels on an ice cold prospect, use your judgement about when to cut your losses,” says Joel Felcher. “We coach our team to break it off after 5 or six unopened emails.”

Tip: Send your emails at the right time by checking out this free tool [Bookmark for later].

mailBoost open ratesAlways know what is/isn't working with real-time engagement insights

Why Your Recipient Is Marking You as Email Spam

#8: Your Email Is Unsolicited (and Aggressive)

According to MailChimp, 43% of users report emails as spam if they don’t recognize the From Name or email address. So if they don’t know you, they flag you.

That’s a tough outlook for emailing cold prospects. And once you’re marked as spam, you’re blocked from reaching that person again.

The takeaway: Personalize your email. This tip is becoming a mantra in our blog posts.

Emails with customized messaging for individual recipients see higher open rates (and reply rates). So not only are you NOT being marked as email spam, but your message is considered and answered.

#9: Overeager Follow-ups

Even if your personalized email arrives to an inbox and receives engagement, you can ruin your chances with a barrage of follow-ups.

People respect persistence, but being overly persistent is disrespectful. You need to let your prospect breathe.

The takeaway: If you’re automating your follow-up with a drip campaign, then space out your follow-up emails at least a few days at a time.

#10: Your Subject Line Is Deceptive

Subject lines that spark curiosity get emails opened, but that’s just half the story. Subject lines that misrepresent emails irritate prospects and drive them to flag you as spam.

For example, some sales reps add “Re:” or “Fw:” to guise their cold emails as conversations and pique their prospect’s interest. In reality, this is misleading. And why would a prospect trust you if your first touch with them is misleading? (They won’t.)

The takeaway: Keep your subject line honest (and free from trigger words, all caps, and exclamation points as mentioned earlier).

Want to try different subject lines? Save email templates, get reporting.

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