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How to Get the Most Out Of Transactional Email Webcast Q&A With Danny and Tim

Q&A: How to Get The Most Out of Transactional Email

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SendGrid email experts Danny Randa and Tim Falls took us through the landscape of transactional email and presented tips on how to take advantage of this communication channel. Later, they answered some questions that they did not have the time to answer during the webinar here.

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Page 1: Q&A: How to Get The Most Out of Transactional Email

How to Get the Most Out Of Transactional Email

Webcast Q&A With Danny and Tim

Page 2: Q&A: How to Get The Most Out of Transactional Email

Last week, SendGrid email experts Danny Randa and Tim Falls took us through the landscape of transactional email and presented tips on how to take advantage of this communication channel. Later, they answered some questions that they did not have the time to answer during the webinar here.

You can also access the webinar here.

Page 3: Q&A: How to Get The Most Out of Transactional Email

Q: Without following CAN-SPAM, what sort of open rate is normal to expect?

A: With transactional emails, the CAN-SPAM regulations can be removed from the equation. Normal open rates for transactional email can vary, depending on the exact purpose of a specific email- e.g. purchase receipts will likely earn much higher open rates than firmed/follower notifications. When analyzing your transactional email open rates, you should aim to achieve a 30-50% open rate. Depending on the exact nature of each category of mail your app is sending you may see rates lower or higher then this. For really important emails, you could see open rates as high as 80-90%, or as low as 10-20% for less important messages that may be filtered and/or deleted before ever being opened.

Page 4: Q&A: How to Get The Most Out of Transactional Email

Q: What’s the increase in deliverability from newsletter to transactional? Percentage?

A: Once again, this is difficult to put a hard number on. If you are following best practices and sending relevant, valuable content; both types of emails can achieve high deliverability. However, you’re likely to see much higher rates of unsubscribers, even if you have a strong opt-in policy process. So, even the best newsletters are more likely to run into deliverability problems than transactional emails simply because they are more susceptible to user behavior that will negatively affect the sender reputation.

Page 5: Q&A: How to Get The Most Out of Transactional Email

Q: As someone who uses email to market our products, my concern is that a company like Facebook will partner directly with companies and pass messages through the Facebook system and bypass the email inbox. Should this idea bother me?

A: I don’t see this as a strong possibility or a likely threat, especially in the near term (i.e. the next 5-10 years). This really just comes back to the argument as to whether or not email is dead, and it’s not. Social networks and their built-in messaging will certainly have their place in online communications, but the effect on email usage will be negligible. Companies like Facebook use email heavily to market its own products, for advertising, and for transactional email. Facebook loves email and couldn’t live without it.

Page 6: Q&A: How to Get The Most Out of Transactional Email

Q: How do you manage all of the out of office/auto reply bounces?

A: If you get auto-replies, such as the “out of the office” reply when you send a transactional email, then you should just let that message be. These are called “soft bounces”, and they’ll eventually get the email when they get back to their inbox. If you notice that you get this reply repeatedly when sending to a particular email address, it’s probably a good idea to remove them from your list, or place them in a suppression list, so as to not send to them anymore. Some people recommend allowing 3-5 soft bounces before removing someone from your list.

Page 7: Q&A: How to Get The Most Out of Transactional Email

Q: How do you feel about HTML versus plain text emails for transactional emails?

A: In most cases, you’d ideally include both variations (i.e. send multi-part mime emails). Plain text emails should be the priority if you are only going to send one version. Most people do not have their mail set up to display all images. Assume that they won’t enable images, and design your emails with this assumption firmly in place. You can create your transactional emails in such a way that your customer will see buttons and colors and such in plain-text versions- you just have to do some homework and be smart about your design. Look at some examples from other companies that are doing this well. If you are including HTML, take advantage of its capabilities and create an awesome experience for those customers who do enable images by default or on a per-message basis.

Page 8: Q&A: How to Get The Most Out of Transactional Email

Q: The deliverability guide you have mentioned doesn’t go into exactly what a good ratio for words to images is. Does SendGrid provide any kind of support or access to a test bed for standard SPAM nets to see possible scores? Is there a way to see what the potential for this email to be caught?

A: Great Question! We recommend IsNotSpam and ProgrammersHeaven as great tools to double check the potential of an email to b caught by a spam filter. At SendGrid, we do have a spam checker app that uses SpamAssassin to assign a score to emails that you request for us to send through your account. You can configure that app to prevent emails from being sent that do not meet the minimum spam score that you specify. The Drawback to this method is that it doesn’t work for simply running your email through the test before actually attempting to send to your customer, but we are hoping to see some improvements to this feature in the not-too-distant future.

Page 9: Q&A: How to Get The Most Out of Transactional Email

Q: How many emails can you send at one time before they will be labeled as spam?

A: Sending a high volume of emails will not necessarily result in any emails being flagged as spam. By following best practices outlines on our blog, white papers, and webinars, you can achieve very high deliverability rates consistently. Companies like Pintrest and Foursquare send tons of transactional email and see great deliverability because they do it right.