When open rates fall, marketing often blames Apple MPP, Gmail tabs, or a vague “algorithm.” Sometimes those matter. More often, infrastructure, list hygiene, and sender behavior explain the drop—and they are under your control. This checklist is for operators who need diagnostics, not another blog post promising “47 hacks.”
How mailbox providers actually decide
Providers score reputation at domain and IP level, then refine by engagement signals: spam complaints, deletes without opens, replies, and invalid addresses that hard-bounce. There is no single public score you can read like a credit report; you infer health from bounce classes, Google Postmaster data, Microsoft SNDS, and seed tests—each imperfect, together useful.
Key idea: deliverability is earned continuously. A great month does not immunize you against a bad list import next week.
Authentication: SPF, DKIM, DMARC
Before creative tweaks:
- SPF authorizes which IPs may send mail for your domain.
- DKIM cryptographically signs messages so tampering is detectable.
- DMARC tells receivers what to do when SPF/DKIM fail and enables reporting.
Misconfiguration is common after new ESP onboarding, subdomain changes, or third-party tools sending “on behalf of” your brand. If marketing uses one ESP and product notifications use another, alignment breaks unless architects map From domains deliberately.
Publish DMARC gradually—start reporting-only, then quarantine/reject once you understand legitimate sources—so you do not block critical operational mail.
List hygiene beats “bigger list” vanity
High hard bounce rates and spam trap hits destroy reputation. Tactics:
- Confirmed opt-in for consumer lists where feasible; for B2B, enforce CRM ownership of who may be emailed.
- Sunset non-engagers after defined months—excluding transactional relationships where silence is normal.
- Segment active readers; stop batch blasting unengaged cohorts “to save the campaign.”
If you reactivate cold lists, do it in small waves with clear value—not a desperate “we miss you” blast to 400,000 sleeping addresses.
Content and frequency: the human layer
Spammy patterns—misleading subjects, image-only emails, URL shorteners on every link—raise suspicion. So does erratic volume: quiet for weeks, then five promos in three days. Prefer predictable cadence and plain-language subject lines that match body content.
Unsubscribe must be trivial. Hiding the link trains users to report spam instead.
Comparison: promotional vs transactional mail
| Type | Typical goal | Risk if blended badly |
|---|---|---|
| Transactional | Password resets, receipts | Promotional content in same stream can confuse classification |
| Marketing | Offers, newsletters | High complaint rate can hurt shared infrastructure |
Use separate subdomains or streams when volume is large; keep brand consistent but isolate reputation risk.
Measurement that matters
- Bounce rate by class (hard vs soft).
- Complaint rate (aim near zero; spikes warrant pause).
- Spam placement via seed lists and Postmaster domain reputation.
- Engaged opens (knowing MPP inflates some metrics—compare trends, not absolutes).
When to escalate to an ESP or consultant
Bring in specialist help if you see sudden inboxing collapse after no intentional change—possible credential theft, DNS hijack, or a shadow sender (new product mailstream nobody told marketing about). Also escalate if shared IP pools at a budget ESP mean your neighbor’s bad behavior drags you—dedicated sending or a tier-1 provider may pay for itself in recovered revenue.
Document every sending source: marketing automation, lifecycle email, sales engagement tools, billing notices, support CCs. A “small” Zendesk forwarder blasting customers can poison the domain you use for newsletters.
New domains and cold starts
Launching on a fresh domain? Expect a ramp: mailbox providers throttle unknown senders. Start with engaged recipients, consistent volume, and plain HTML—prove stable behavior before big acquisition blasts. Warm-up services exist; the honest version is still permission and patience.
Practical implementation note
To keep this actionable, run a 30-day execution cycle with one owner, one success metric, and one weekly review checkpoint. If outcomes are improving, scale carefully; if not, document failure causes before changing tools. This prevents strategy drift and turns content ideas into measurable operating decisions.
FAQs
Should we buy a list to “grow faster”?
Almost always no—legal aside, purchased lists tank reputation and waste spend.
Do emojis in subject lines hurt?
Not inherently; irrelevant subjects hurt. Test small cohorts.
What about BIMI and brand logos in inbox?
BIMI can reinforce trust when implemented with aligned DMARC—but it is not a substitute for authentication basics. Invest after SPF/DKIM/DMARC are stable.
Plain-text vs HTML-only campaigns?
Multipart mail (text + HTML) is still good hygiene—some clients and filters prefer it. Pure image emails without alt text look like spam fingerprints; avoid.
Related on InsightEra
- Customer data platforms primer
- US data privacy patchwork
- AI for online businesses
- Local retail digital branding
- Minimal web design and conversion
General business commentary—not legal or professional advice.
Takeaway: Fix authentication, lists, and cadence before you redesign templates. Most “sudden” deliverability crises are boring infrastructure and discipline problems wearing a mystery costume.
