<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=1822615684631785&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1"/>

Throttle your email campaign (add delays/pauses between messages) [Updated 2024]

You can now choose to throttle your email campaign, adding a few seconds of pause after each individual email is sent. This is instead of the default way of sending emails as quickly as possible.

When you check the “Pause” box, your campaign will pause for the designated time between emails. The exact number of seconds is determined at random, but you can choose between 4 ranges:

  • 5-10 seconds
  • 10-60 seconds
  • 1-5 minutes
  • 5-10 minutes

These settings are new as of July 2023. Going forward, you can control the delay between emails on a per-campaign basis.

An example

If you’re sending a campaign to 100 email addresses, normally those 100 email messages would all be sent from beginning to end before you can even snap your fingers. With the “Pause…” setting, every individual email will be spread out over 5 to 10 seconds, meaning the campaign will send slowly and take anywhere from 5 to 15 minutes to fully send.

Minimum Time = 100 emails x 5 seconds/email ~ about 5 minutes.
Maximum Time = 100 emails x 10 seconds/email ~ about 15 minutes.

Why would you want to slow down the sending speed of your email campaign?

There are several reasons:

1. If you send many emails to the same corporate domain, then you may wish to use this feature so that you don’t flood any one email server with a bunch of emails from you at once, which may cause that server to flag you or block you entirely. Typically this isn’t an issue with a large email service provider like Gmail or Yahoo! or Hotmail, but if you’re sending hundreds of emails to @company.com, then company.com’s email server may have checks in place to prevent one sender from flooding its server. In that case, a few seconds pause between emails may solve this.

2. If you frequently get your Gmail accounts suspended or disabled by Google, this may also help you fly under the radar. Adding a few seconds pause in between emails will make your sending patterns look more natural, and may help you fly under the radar of Gmail’s detection systems.

3. If you frequently get “You have exceeded your limit” bouncebacks from Gmail, this can help GMass detect those bounces sooner and pause your campaign sooner. Typically when you’ve exceeded your limit, Gmail may wait a few minutes before bouncing your emails back, and in those few minutes GMass continues to send, not realizing that a bunch of “You have exceeded your limit” bouncebacks is about to flood your Inbox. When GMass detects these, it pauses your campaign for 4 hours. If you add a few seconds pause, it allows GMass the ability to catch these before too many emails go out, resulting in the same error.

4. If you’re just looking for a way to slow down your campaign and make your sending pattern seem more natural, then this setting is for you.

Of course, I’m mostly speculating on the above benefits. I’d love to hear from YOU after you use the feature to see if:

1. Your deliverability has improved, as measured by open rates.
2. If your’e now able to deliver more email to a single domain than you were before
3. If it helps with account suspensions

This MailChimp article also explains the issue of sending speeds and throttling emails in this manner, although MailChimp states that they can’t actually throttle emails like GMass now can.

Another major email provider, Mailjet, has this article on sending speeds.

Use the “Pause” setting and the “max emails/day” settings together or separately

You can use the “Pause…” setting and the “max emails/day” setting independently of each other, or together.

If you use them both, then GMass will throttle both the number of emails sent per day and add the 5-10 second pause in between the emails sent in each daily batch.

If you use just the “Pause” setting and leave the “max emails/day” set to the maximum, then GMass will attempt to send your entire campaign, subject to your Gmail’s account limits, at once, but with the 5-10 second pause in between individual emails.

If you set just the “max emails/day” setting and leave the “Pause” setting off, GMass will send the set amount of emails per day, but send each daily batch as fast as possible.

Sometimes the “Pause” setting is auto-applied

There are some instances where the “Pause a few seconds…” setting is applied automatically to your email campaign even when you didn’t set it.

For example, if you are sending from a newer Gmail account with little or no sending history, GMass may auto apply this Setting to improve your email deliverability.

If your campaign is bumping up against Gmail’s sending limits, where you begin receiving “You have reached a limit” bounces, GMass may force subsequent batches of the campaign to be sent with a delay between emails, so that GMass can help deliver your emails and detect future limit issues sooner during the campaign sending process rather than later.

Finally, if GMass detects that you are approaching your sending limit while sending a campaign, GMass may auto-apply the delay after 80% of your emails have been sent, because sometimes Gmail starts bouncing emails with the “You have reached a limit” message even before your account has sent its maximum allowed emails for the day. This way, GMass can detect that your account is bouncing emails and pause your campaign, before too many bounces are generated.

Ready to transform Gmail into an email marketing/cold email/mail merge tool?


Only GMass packs every email app into one tool — and brings it all into Gmail for you. Better emails. Tons of power. Easy to use.


TRY GMASS FOR FREE

Download Chrome extension - 30 second install!
No credit card required
Love what you're reading? Get the latest email strategy and tips & stay in touch.
   


8 Comments
  1. gгeat issues aⅼtogether, уou just gained a new reader.

    Whɑt mayy you suggest about your post tһat yoou simply made some dazys
    in the past? Any positive?

  2. Hi! I was wondering if there was a way i could calculate and throttle my campaign speed myself knowing my smtp server limit as per how much i can send per minute/hour. In Gmass Notification, I discovered your system automatically sets “Sending speed: 1000000 emails/day ” when ‘pause’ is not set. Thinking that determines the speed, i calculated and set my speed to a lower number with the aim of achieving a moderate throttle not as slow as ‘pause btw campaign’ and not as fast as the normal Gmass full blast. This experiment didn’t quite work. Can you please tell me if my aim was logical and is there a way around it? Thanks in advance

  3. Can anyone tell me if this applies to the following error I get from Gmail? I got a ton of what appear to be bounced emails that have the following message:

    Delivery incomplete
    There was a temporary problem delivering your message to [email protected]. Gmail will retry for 46 more hours. You’ll be notified if the delivery fails permanently.

    Is this the result of exceeding the limit? I’m not sure since it doesn’t actually say “bounced”.

  4. Does the “pause” feature apply to the auto follow ups also? My account was temporarily suspended, I’ve recovered it now, and I am modifying all existing campaigns (drafts) so that they now have a 10-60 second pause. These are for campaigns that have already sent the first email but not the auto follow up. I would like to know if this will affect them. If not I will probably cancel the auto-follow up just to be safe. Please inform, thank you.

    1. Hi Ryan,

      Yes, follow-ups will respect the changes you make from the main campaign’s GMass settings. Please note though that the change doesn’t apply retroactively but will only apply to pending/unsent emails.

  5. I will be sending around 500 emails a day for the coming period. I am using sendgrid. Is there any benefit to still using the pause feature?

    1. Hi Joey,

      Yes, as it would still make your email sending more natural. This doesn’t affect your sending ability as it would if sending via Gmail servers however if you have a number of users on the same email server then the throttling would help by making your email sends appear more natural. This way, any given email server you are sending to does not receive the emails sent in one fell swoop which can affect your deliverability if your email address is deemed as a source of email flooding.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Start your free trial of GMass now

Install in 30 seconds — no credit card or sign up form required

Try GMass for free Then check out the quickstart guide to send your first mail merge email in minutes!

GMass

Share This