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If you live in India and use an Indian credit card to subscribe to software and other services, you’ve likely had trouble making payments lately because of the Reserve Bank of India’s new rules on recurring payments that went into effect on October 1.

All existing recurring payments under 5,000 Rs. need a one-time manual approvals now via AFA (Additional Factor Authorization), and all recurring payments over 5,000 Rs. need manual approval for every single charge. This has wreaked havoc on any company that sells subscription services to people in India. Indian customers of services worldwide, including GMass, have found that their transactions are denied and their subscriptions are being cancelled. At partial fault is the credit card issues themselves, many of whom simply weren’t ready for this change.

The impact on GMass

At GMass, about 20% of our user base is from India, so the impact since October 1 has been substantial. Our Indian customers who are used to paying us monthly have had their transactions denied which has led to their subscriptions being cancelled, and new Indian customers trying to subscribe for the first time are finding that their credit cards are being declined and they can’t subscribe.

How we’re working with the new rule

Starting today, we’ve implemented a few new payment flows to help navigate the new recurring payments rule.

If you’re a new subscriber and you’re entering your credit card information on our Pricing page to subscribe, if your transaction is denied, you’ll be taken to a page where you can manually pay your invoice. This is a Stripe-hosted page that will take you through any AFA required by your bank. One the invoice is paid, your subscription will automatically activate.

If you’re an existing subscriber and your monthly payment has been declined, you’ll also be sent a link to a Stripe-hosted invoice where you can manually make payment to keep your subscription active.

If you’re an existing customer and your monthly payment is declined, you’ll get a link emailed to you where you can pay the invoice manually.

Further Reading

An excellent article was published in The Ken about India’s new rule.

Here is a TechCrunch article on the new rule.

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As of March 2023, The Gate has been deprecated and replaced by The Reply Project, GMass’s tool to make replying to emails 10x faster. (Which incorporates everything from The Gate, plus way more, and makes the entire process easier.)

Read about how The Reply Project is now the backbone of GMass’s reply management here.

Let’s say you send out a campaign with a teaser, offering something of value to your prospects, like this:

You don’t want to send everyone a coupon code, because you want people to reply indicating interest before getting their coupon code. Normally, you’d collect replies, and then you’d go through your email program, and one by one, reply to each person who replied, pasting in their coupon code. That’s painstaking and error-prone.

With GMass’s new Gate, we make that process simple and efficient.

It goes like this:

  1. Send out your campaign as normal.
  2. Create a reply “template.”
  3. In the GMass dashboard, scan your replies for those who are interested, and with the click of a button, send the reply template.

The reply template can be personalized just like a regular campaign, including any data from your Google Sheet.

First, create a reply template

Using the Gmail Compose box, put the special address [email protected] in the To field. Then set the Subject to anything you like that will help you remember this template. The Subject will never be seen by anyone, since this will only ever be a reply to another email, so the Subject of that email will be seen. Then, for the body, type the reply, and use any personalization fields you like from your Google Sheet.

Then, send replies after your recipients reply

Remember, this feature is to make it easier to reply after someone replies. Think of it as a “reply to reply” feature.

Go to your dashboard and click the number under the Replies column to open the fly-out Replies panel.

Now you’ll see a list of replies, and the first few words of each reply. You’ll also see a sentiment score for each reply you’ve received. These are the same replies you would have seen directly in your Gmail account.

Choose the reply template you created above from the “Reply” dropdown at the top of the fly-out panel.

As soon as you choose your “reply template,” you’ll see two new buttons appear next to each reply: Send and Draft.

If you click Send, then the reply will be sent. If you click Draft, then a draft reply will be created in your Gmail account, and then you can go to the Draft in Gmail, and make any changes, or just make sure it looks right, and then send it with the normal Gmail Send button.

In my example, I scan through the replies, gauge who actually wants the coupon code, and I hit Send for each one.

Now my three replies have been sent and each reply has been personalized and included in the original conversation with my customer. If I go to my Gmail account and look at the thread with one of my customers, like [email protected], it will look just like a reply if I had manually responded with the coupon code.

That’s it! I hope you enjoy The Gate!

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


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You send out a cold email campaign, a bunch of people reply, and now your inbox is flooded with replies. Yay!

Some people want more information, some people want to book a meeting with you, and some people are mad at you for emailing them in the first place! You can’t please everyone.

Now you can quickly scan through your replies and see who your most interested prospects are by looking at a score indicating positive or negative sentiment. We’re using Amazon’s Comprehend API to accomplish this, so along with numerical scores indicating sentiment, you get a final positive/negative sentiment indicator. This is also known as “lead scoring” because we give you a score to indicate how strong a lead is.

How do I see the sentiment analysis?

Just log in to your dashboard and find your campaign, or go to your web-based campaign report. In both cases, click the number of replies.

A flyout panel will appear on the right side of the screen showing you the replies to your campaign. And each response is scored as positive, negative, or neutral.

Reply flyout panel

As you can see in the image above, you can then click on the link to Reply to these emails with The Reply Project. The Reply Project is GMass’s complete reimagining of the email responding process. It opens all your emails (in this case, all the replies to the campaign) on one screen. Then you can write quick replies or use templates or ChatGPT to respond even faster.

The Reply Project in action

Between sentiment analysis and The Reply Project you should be able to properly assess and respond to replies to a campaign faster and easier than you’ve ever done in the past.

See why 99% of users say they’ve had their best deliverability ever with GMass


Email marketing, cold email, and mail merge all in one tool — that works inside Gmail


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Did you know that your sender reputation affects the deliverability of your marketing and transactional emails?

If you have a poor sender reputation, your emails will probably end up in your recipient’s spam folder. On the flip side, a good sender reputation can almost guarantee that your emails go straight to subscriber inboxes.

But wait.
What is sender reputation in the first place?

In this article, I’ll cover what sender reputation is and why it’s important. I’ll then show you four ways to measure your sender score and six factors that can give you a poor sender reputation. Finally, I’ll cover five ways to boost your sending reputation with the help of a brilliant email tool.

This Article Contains:

(Click on the links below to jump to a section of your choice)

Let’s jump into it.

What is Sender Reputation?

Sender reputation (also known as email sender reputation) is a score used by mailbox providers (MBP) and internet service providers (ISP) to identify which domains and IP addresses are trustworthy.

A high sender reputation score means outgoing emails from that domain will almost always arrive in subscribers’ inboxes.

However, a poor sender reputation can cause email inbox providers to mark your emails as spam and even reject the delivery of emails.

The sending reputation of a domain is determined by several factors like:

  • The number of emails sent
  • The number of recipients who’ve marked the domain’s email as spam
  • Whether the sending domain is on any blacklist
  • How many recipients interact with emails of the sending domain
  • How many people unsubscribe from the domain’s email list

Want to know why your emails are caught by spam filters?
Read my article on spam filters to find out.

Back to contents

Let’s now explore why sender reputation really matters for a sending domain.

Why is Sender Reputation Important?

Did you know that the average employee in the US receives over 120 emails per day?
If you take one minute to read each email, you’d be checking email for 2 hours per day!

This is why every MBP and ISP tries to minimize the number of emails delivered to a user’s inbox.

Naturally, a domain or IP address with a low sender reputation won’t have its emails delivered to recipients. And as a result, their email marketing efforts will suffer.

If your business uses a shared IP address, things can get even more challenging.

If you have an IP reputation issue, anyone using that shared IP address will also run into a reputation issue.

Fortunately, you can boost sender reputation to get more of your emails delivered to subscriber inboxes — but it’ll take some time, and a few email campaigns before your score is back on top.

This is why it’s essential to keep your sending reputation high from the start. 

This way, your campaigns won’t suffer from a bad reputation with inbox providers, and you’ll see a good return on your email marketing spend.

Back to contents

Now you know why a domain’s reputation is important, but how do you measure it to see if you have a reputation issue?

4 Ways to Check Sender Reputation

Here’s how you can measure sender reputation:

1. Use Tools to Measure Your Sender Score

Using a tool alone to measure sender score won’t give you a complete idea of your sender reputation levels. However, it’s still an excellent place to start.

These specialized tools factor in data from several sources and compare your email sending behavior to determine your domain and IP reputation score.

Here are some tools you can use to determine your sender reputation:

  • Sender Score – Gives you a sender reputation score from 0 to 100 (much like a credit score) and shows how your IP address ranks against the email sender score of others.
  • Barracuda Central – Provides an IP reputation and domain reputation checkup for businesses.
  • TrustedSource – This service is run by McAfee and provides basic insight about your sender reputation score and data about the DNS and mail server.
  • Google Postmaster Tools – Helps senders track the data of their emails, such as their IP reputation and domain reputation, delivery errors, and more.
  • Microsoft Smart Network Data Services (SDNS) – Microsoft’s SNDS provides insight into data points like the IP reputation, the number of spam traps you deliver to, and spam complaint rates.

But since these tools alone aren’t enough to give you a complete picture, let’s explore other ways you can check your reputation.

2. Send Messages to Yourself

Another great way to check if you have a high reputation score or a bad reputation with inbox providers is to send messages to yourself.

You can set up multiple email addresses with several mailbox provider services to test how your reputation affects email deliverability.

Then, you can send emails to these new email addresses and analyze the results.

If all of the emails arrive in the inbox, then you have a good sender reputation. But if most of your emails end up in the spam folder, that’s a sign that your sender score is low.

3. Check Deny Listings of Your IP Address and Domain

A deny list is a collection of IP addresses or domains that have been caught sending out unsolicited emails.

Your domain can be added to deny listings if the emails you send end up as spam trap hits or are marked as spam emails by recipients.

You can use tools like MxToolbox, DNS Checker and Netcore to see if your IP or domain names are on any black listings that can cause deliverability issues. If your details are on a deny listing, your email reputation has a higher chance of declining.

4. Analyze Statistics and Identify Patterns

Sender reputation has a lot to do with how recipients interact with your emails.

For example, if you see metrics like your open rate and click-through rate decreasing and more emails being marked as spam emails, you can expect your reputation score to drop.

On the other hand, higher engagement from recipients is a good sign for your sender reputation, and you can expect more emails to end up in recipient’s and subscribers’ inboxes.

Use these patterns to determine what you’re doing right and what you can improve. Pair it with the other measures I discussed above to get an accurate idea of sender reputation.

Back to contents

I’ve talked about how you can check sender reputation.
But if you realize you have a bad reputation, how do you identify what’s causing it?

6 Factors That Hurt Sender Reputation

Here are some things that can hurt your IP’s or domain’s reputation:

1. Misspelled Email Addresses Resulting in a High Bounce Rate

When someone enters an email address manually onto a sign-up form, it’s easy to misspell it — especially if they use a mobile device.

Now, when you send an email to a misspelled email address, your email bounces (fails to deliver). Email providers will be less tolerant of outgoing emails when your bounce rate increases, causing most of them to be marked as spam emails.

An easy way to avoid misspelled emails and a high bounce rate is to use a double-opt-in feature. Anyone who signs up for your email list will have to confirm their subscription through a link in an email.

Alternatively, you can use an email verification tool to recognize invalid addresses instantly. This way, you won’t send marketing and transactional emails to non-existent email addresses. Some email marketing tools like GMass can do this for you, too.

2. Using Purchased Email Lists

Most businesses consider purchasing email lists an easier alternative to actually building their email list organically.

But it’s a really bad idea.

All the leads you get in that email list are non-organic, unknown users — they don’t know you and have no reason to trust you. Naturally, when you reach out to these unknown users with an email, they probably won’t engage with it and may even mark it as spam. This makes it hard for your emails to get past spam filters.

And remember, a spam complaint can significantly affect your domain’s reputation because it essentially gives out negative signals that recipients don’t trust you.

If you have too many spam complaint situations, all your outgoing emails can end up in the spam folder.

Want to learn how you can send cold emails to unknown users the right way?
Read my guide on building a fail-proof cold email strategy.

3. Using Outdated Email Lists

Businesses are always looking to expand their mailing list. But they never think about removing outdated email IDs from their list — which is really important.

Why?
People abandon email accounts all the time — whether it’s someone changing their personal email address or an employee leaving a company and deactivating their work email address.

When you send emails to inactive subscribers, your emails won’t be opened or interacted with. Continuously sending emails to these inactive subscribers will result in hard bounce emails, hurting your sender reputation.

That’s why you should clean out and segment your email lists regularly to avoid being denied by spam filters and your internet service provider. Generally, you should clean your email lists at least once a quarter to ensure it’s always up to date.

4. Creating Poor Email Content

Sending out emails with poor content is a surefire way to deteriorate a good reputation you’ve built over time. Recipients will almost certainly mark a poorly written email as spam, reducing your sender reputation.

To ensure you avoid sending poor emails, make sure you:

  • Personalize the email for the recipient’s unique needs.
  • Optimize emails for mobile devices.
  • Avoid using spammy words in emails.
  • Test all links in your email.
  • Format emails for high readability.
  • Avoid baiting recipients with clickbait subject lines.

5. Inconsistent Email Outreach

Not every email marketer understands this, but the frequency of your emails is a massive factor in deliverability.

If your emails are inconsistent, even the most engaged recipients will ultimately lose interest in what you have to say — and inbox placement rates will drop.

However, overloading customers’ inboxes with emails isn’t good for your business either.

Ideally, you should let recipients know how often they can expect emails from your business.

This way, customers’ inboxes won’t be full of unexpected emails — and you’ll have high audience engagement rates and a good reputation for your emails.

6. Sending Email to Spam Traps

Spam trap hits are something you need to avoid at all costs when sending emails.

What’s a spam trap?
Spam traps are email addresses used by internet providers to check if email senders are following email best practices.

Spam traps can be email addresses newly created by an email service provider or even recycled spam traps. Recycled traps are old, abandoned email addresses that are reactivated to identify which senders don’t clean their email list.

When you send an email to a spam trap, your domain gets added to a blacklist.

How?
When you send emails to email IDs that are actually spam traps, ISPs know that senders have unethically sourced email addresses.

This is because individuals don’t use spam traps, so the only way a spam trap ends up on an email list is if it’s harvested without consent.

Anyone sending emails to a purchased or unethically sourced email list sets their sending domain up for spam trap hits. This will almost certainly land the domain on a blacklist.

Back to contents

I’ve covered what can put your domain on industry blacklists and harm your reputation as a legitimate sender.

But what can help you boost your reputation, so your emails are always delivered to customers’ inboxes? Let’s find out.

4 Ways to Boost Your Sender Reputation

In this section, I’ll mention certain best practices you can try out to boost sender reputation with any internet service provider.

I’ll also tell you how GMass can help you with inbox placement for Gmail users.

Wait, what’s GMass?
GMass is a powerful email marketing tool used worldwide, from social media platforms like Twitter and LinkedIn to tech giants like Google and Uber. It’s perfect for small businesses and solopreneurs too!

With GMass, you can streamline your email outreach efforts and take the proper steps to boost your sender reputation.

Read on to find out what you can do to get a good reputation with your ISP and how GMass helps:

1. Regularly Update Your Email List

Remember, refreshing or updating email lists is a surefire way to avoid blocking by any mailbox provider.

All you need to do is check your email list and remove:

  • Inactive subscribers.
  • Invalid addresses.
  • Any emails obtained from purchased email lists.

This can help boost your sender reputation and ensure the email service provider delivers your emails to genuine subscribers.

How can GMass help?

When you use GMass to send email campaigns, any users that unsubscribe from your email list are automatically moved from the mailing list to the unsubscribe list.

This way, your emails will only be delivered to recipients who want to receive them.

Now, if you’re concerned about sending emails to invalid addresses, don’t worry!

GMass’ free email verification service will help you verify recipient email addresses before sending out your emails. You can verify emails right inside Gmail or use the web-based tool. This can help reduce your bounce rates.

Moreover, you can use GMass to build mailing lists from email addresses within your Gmail inbox. You can also add emails based on specific criteria, making it easy to identify relevant email addresses and create a list.

2. Use an Opt-in Policy for Marketing Emails

An excellent way to ensure you don’t send out unsolicited marketing and transactional emails is to adopt an opt-in policy with all new subscribers.

All you have to do is ensure they go to their inbox and confirm their subscription.

This way, people can’t sign up to a mailing list with a fake email address just to profit off a promotion you might hold, and your reputation or delivery rate won’t suffer through emails sent to non-respondent addresses.

How can GMass help?

You can automate drip email campaigns using GMass, Zapier, and Google Sheets.

Any new sign-ups to your email list will automatically be added to a Google Sheet, which can be used to send the opt-in email. If they click on the confirmation link, you can use it as an email trigger to automatically add them to your primary email list.

Here’s how setting up a drip campaign in GMass looks like:

Drip campaign

3. Pay Close Attention to Email Delivery Rates

Regularly monitoring your email delivery rates can help you stay on top of any issues that can potentially harm your reputation as a legitimate sender.

Pay attention to patterns of the unknown user rate, unsubscribe rates, inbox placement, and other email metrics that tell you if you’re doing something wrong.

You should also look at what your email bounce codes mean.

Hard bounces occur because of invalid email addresses, but a soft bounce can happen for many reasons. Pay attention to the bounce code — it can tell you how to deal with that specific type of error.

How can GMass help?

When you use GMass to send out email campaigns, you get access to many vital email metrics that help you monitor your email performance.

Some of the metrics GMass tracks include:

  • Open rate – Number of recipients who’ve opened your email.
  • Click-through rate – Number of recipients who’ve clicked on a link in the email.
  • Unsubscribe rate – Number of unsubscribed recipients.

You can use these metrics to determine whether your email strategy works or needs improvement to deliver optimal results.

Campaign report

4. Write Attractive and Interesting Emails

If recipients don’t interact with your messages, your email reputation as a legitimate sender can quickly go down the drain.

Don’t resort to generic email marketing templates; they’ll only deteriorate your content reputation. Instead, personalize your emails and create a beautiful, well-designed email campaign for each subscriber.

A high content reputation will automatically boost your campaign results and contribute significantly to brand growth.

How can GMass help?

GMass can automatically personalize emails to insert the first name of each recipient as well as add personalized images, links, and even personalized blocks of text within the email.

This helps you add a personal touch to all your campaign emails.

Additionally, GMass supports A/B testing — a feature that helps you test variations of an email message. You can then determine which approach works best and use that for your email campaign.

AB testing

Back to contents

Wrapping Up

Keeping your sender reputation high is crucial to getting optimal results from your email campaigns.

You can keep a lookout for everything we’ve mentioned here to keep your sender reputation high and deliver emails straight to subscribers’ inboxes.

Pair up these best practices with a powerful email outreach tool like GMass, and you’ll be able to improve your sender reputation in no time.

All you need to do is add the GMass Chrome extension and get started, so why not give it a try today?

Ready to send better emails and save a ton of time?


GMass is the only tool for marketing emails, cold emails, and mail merge — all inside Gmail. Tons of power but easy to learn and use.


TRY GMASS FOR FREE

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If you have a website, app, or blog, you’ve likely connected to a transactional email service through a transactional email API or an SMTP service. Popular SMTP services include SendGrid, Mailgun, and Amazon SES. You can now use the GMass SMTP service instead.

What is a transactional email?

Transactional emails are emails that are sent after a user takes an action in your app.

Examples include:

  • confirmation emails after filling out a form
  • shipping notifications after an order is shipped
  • password reset emails

Any email that is sent to your user to facilitate a “transaction”. And by “transaction”, I don’t mean a financial transaction. I mean, any transaction on your website, including filling out a form, placing an order, signing up, etc.

Today we are introducing a different kind of SMTP service — a service that sends your transactional email through your Google account. Just relay your emails through smtp.gmass.co and your email will be sent through your own Gmail or Google Workspace account. You’ll still get analytics on opens and clicks like you’re used to with other SMTP services.

Why is the GMass SMTP relay better than traditional SMTP services?

There are several advantages to using our new SMTP relay service.

  1. Searching: With every transactional email now logged to the Sent Mail folder of your Gmail account, you can easily search for any email by subject, body, recipient address, sender address, and more. For example, if you’re using this service to send “Your order has shipped” notifications, and the body of the email includes the order number and other details, you can now search for any transactional email just by searching in Gmail. Traditional SMTP services like SendGrid and others have poor search capabilities, and some even charge extra if you want to search beyond a few days worth of history.
  2. Deliverability: The default setup when you sign up for services with SendGrid or others is you’re put into a shared pool of IP addresses. Often times, those IP addresses are blacklisted in several places, and deliverability is poor. When you complain to the service, they ask you to upgrade (and pay for) a dedicated IP address. They win and you lose. With the GMass SMTP relay, your emails are sent from your Google account and from Google’s IP addresses. Nobody blocks Google’s IPs.
  3. Ease of setup: When you start sending through a new SMTP service, you have to enter in DNS records, set up SPF, DKIM, and other protocols with the service provider. With the GMass SMTP relay, as long as your email service has been configured with Google Workspace already, there’s nothing else to set up.
  4. Easily turn transactional emails into marketing campaigns: Let’s say you’re using the service to send “Your order has shipped” emails. Using the GMass Chrome extension’s “build email list” button, you can easily extract all the recipient addresses of the “Your order has shipped” emails, and send a campaign to anyone that has received a past order from you. No more importing/exporting data between your order entry system and your email marketing system.
  5. Speed: Given that Google controls about half of the world’s Inboxes, there is the lowest latency possible sending email from a Google account to a Google account.

Know your limits

The GMass SMTP Service should only be used to send email from your website/app if you have low-volume needs. If you have a gmail.com account, you can send about 500 total emails/day, and if you have a Google Workspace account, you can send about 2,000 emails/day. If you need to send more transactional email than your account allows, then you should use a regular service like SendGrid, Mailgun, or Amazon SES rather than the GMass SMTP service.

Is this for me?

GMass offers several “SMTP” options, so it’s easy to get confused about whether this new service is for you.

The GMass SMTP Service is not for you if:

  1. You’re using GMass to send out campaigns and you want to get around Gmail’s limits. For that, you have to integrate with an SMTP service like SendGrid, Mailgun, or JangoSMTP. More information.
  2. Your only email sending needs are for your marketing campaigns or cold email campaigns.
  3. You need to send more transactional email per day than your Google account allows (about 500 for a gmail.com account and about 2,000 for a Google Workspace account).

The GMass SMTP service is for you if:

  1. You have a website or app that sends emails right now through another transactional email service like SendGrid, Mailgun, or JangoSMTP.
  2. You have devices like printers or scanners on your network that need an SMTP service.
  3. You use an external email client that has its SMTP server set to some other service.
  4. You have a WordPress site and are using an SMTP plugin like WP Mail SMTP. In each of these cases, you can relay your email through smtp.gmass.co instead of the SMTP server you’re currently using, if your volume needs are below what your Gmail account allows sending.

Why can’t you use the GMass SMTP service with the GMass extension for Gmail?

The GMass extension adds buttons inside your Gmail account so you can send campaigns directly inside Gmail. Under the standard setup, the number of emails you can send is limited to what your Gmail or Google Workspace account allows. Typically that’s 500/day for gmail.com accounts and 2,000/day for Google Workspace accounts. If you connect your GMass account to an outside SMTP service like SendGrid or Mailgun, you can break those limits and send more email.

So now that GMass has its own SMTP service, why can’t you connect your GMass account to that service to break Gmail’s limits?

Because the GMass SMTP service sends emails through your Gmail account. When you send emails through an external SMTP service like SendGrid or Mailgun, your emails are sent from their networks over their IP addresses. When you send emails through the GMass SMTP service, your emails are sent directly from Google’s IP addresses from your Gmail account, so sending through our SMTP service subjects you to the standard sending limits of your Gmail account.

Getting started

Set your website, app, desktop tool, or other email system to send email through this SMTP server:

smtp.gmass.co

You can connect on any of the following TCP/IP ports:

25, 465, 587, or 2525

Use basic SMTP authentication. Your credentials are:

Username: gmass (everyone’s username is “gmass”)
Password: Your API key created from your account’s settings

You can connect via TLS (Transport Layer Security) to any of the above ports.

Set your tracking preferences for open and click tracking in your account settings.

Pricing

The GMass SMTP Service is free for everyone right now. You can send up to your Google account’s daily limits without subscribing to a paid GMass plan.

Doesn’t Gmail already provide an SMTP relay?

Yes Gmail already offers an SMTP relay, but it’s difficult to use and doesn’t track your emails. You can relay emails through smtp-relay.gmail.com, as Google explains, and send emails directly from your Gmail account. So why use smtp.gmass.co when you can use smtp-relay.gmail.com?

The native Gmail SMTP relay has these disadvantages:

  1. It’s complicated to set up. You have to turn on settings in your Google account like “Allow less secure apps”. (Check out our Gmail SMTP settings article to learn more.)
  2. It exposes your Google account username and password.
  3. It doesn’t provide analytics like open and click tracking.
  4. It doesn’t provide an audit trail of messages.

More examples of transactional email, from yours truly

Here are examples of transactional email that I’m personally sending through the GMass SMTP service:

  • “Welcome to GMass” emails whenever somebody signs up.
  • A “You have subscribed!” email after somebody subscribes to a paid plan.
  • A “Your campaign has completed” email after a campaign is finished sending.
  • A “Disk space low” email to me and our sysadmins if the hard drive on one of the GMass servers is low on space.
  • A “Your job has failed” email to me and our sysadmins if our database server throws any kind of error.

What kinds of transactional email do you send?

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.
   


Is cold email illegal?

The short answer is no; cold emailing isn’t illegal. However, based on where you are, you’ll need to comply with anti-spam laws like the CAN-SPAM Act or the GDPR to ensure you don’t land in legal hot waters.

In this article, I’ll explain the difference between cold emailing and spam and what laws apply to unsolicited emails in various jurisdictions. Finally, I’ll provide four practical cold emailing guidelines to help you run successful, legally compliant cold email campaigns.

This Article Contains:

(Click on the links below to jump to specific sections.)

Let’s dive in.

Note: If you want a cold email masterclass, read my in-depth guide on cold emailing to learn when to use cold emails, how to write them, and more. 

Is Cold Email Illegal?

No, cold emailing is not illegal. 

However, it often gets confused with spam emails, which are illegal in most cases.

Governments in several countries have actually introduced legislation to regulate spam emails.
That’s why any sales professional who wants to stay on the right side of the law should know the difference between cold email vs spam email.

How Are Cold Emails Different Than Spam?

Usually, an email is considered spam if the sender sends mass unsolicited emails to a list of recipients without bothering to know who those recipients are, or if the email is even applicable for them. These email lists are purchased or scraped from thousands of websites using bad prospecting software.

These unsolicited emails often go straight into the recipient’s spam folder.

On the other hand, cold emails are intentional and personalized to the recipient’s needs.
It aims to provide value to the recipient, helping them address any unique goal or challenge they may be facing.

Cold emailers screen the recipients for context and do not send random emails to a list in general.

Now, as long as it’s done right, cold emailing is perfectly legal.

However, various countries have their own rules regarding what’s “right” for unsolicited commercial emails. It’s crucial you keep these in mind for your cold email outreach campaign.

In this article, I’ll take you through the legal aspects of cold emailing in:

Disclaimer: The information in this blog post is provided for general informational purposes only and may not reflect the current law in your jurisdiction. No information in this post constitutes legal advice, nor is it intended to be a substitute for legal counsel.

1. Cold email laws in the United States

In the U.S., the CAN-SPAM Act was enacted in 2003.

The CAN-SPAM Act established the requirements for all commercial messages that promote or advertise a product or service.

A. What the law states

The CAN-SPAM Act gives recipients the right to stop receiving unsolicited emails and specifies harsh penalties of up to $43,792 for violations. It applies to any electronic message and not just bulk emails.

B. How to comply

Here are some key guidelines to help you avoid breaching the CAN-SPAM Act when sending commercial emails to U.S.-based recipients:

  • Never use misleading or false information: All the information you provide, including your “from,” “to,” “reply-to,” email address, routing information, and originating domain name must be correct.
  • Don’t use deceptive subject lines: The email subject line should accurately indicate the content of the email.
  • Clarify what the message is about: Always clearly state if the email message is an advertisement.
  • Include your location: You must include your valid physical address in a cold email. This could be your current street address, a post office box you’ve registered with the U.S. Postal Service, or a private mailbox registered with a commercial mail receiving agency.
  • Inform recipients how to opt out of receiving future emails from you: It should be unambiguous and easy to do.
  • Honor recipients’ opt-out requests promptly: You must be able to process opt-out requests within 10-days of receiving them.

And if you hire a company to handle your email marketing campaigns, you still need to ensure they comply with CAN-SPAM requirements when sending emails on your behalf.

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2. Cold email laws in yhe European Union

If you’re sending marketing emails to E.U. citizens, you’ll need to comply with two sets of regulations.

The E.U. initially outlined its rules against spam in the Privacy and Electronic Communications Directive 2002 (PECD). Also known as the ePrivacy Regulation, it specifies that “everyone has the right to respect for their private and family life, home and communications.”

You’ll also need to comply with the GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation), which came into effect on 28th May 2018. Any organization in non-E.U. countries that offer goods and services to or communicates with E.U. residents will also have to comply with the GDPR.

While the PECD focuses on the “respect for private and family life,” the GDPR focuses on the “protection of personal data.”

A. What the law states

The general aim of the PECD is to prohibit certain unsolicited commercial messages. As with all E.U. directives, it leaves it to the member states to translate into law.

On top of that, the GDPR dictates how organizations obtain recipient data and keep it secure.

As a result, anyone undertaking digital marketing or sending sales emails will need to comply with both the PECD and GDPR.

B. How to comply

When sending unsolicited emails, it is possible to remain PECD and GDPR compliant by ensuring that these emails are directed to people who will find the message helpful.

You also have to fulfill other requirements such as:

  • The sender must identify themselves and the topic of the email, provide accurate sender details, and include a genuine physical address in the email.
  • There must be a straightforward, unambiguous way for recipients to opt-out of future emails and request the deletion of their personal data.

Now it’s important to remember that each country in the E.U. has its own regulations which supplement the GDPR. You’ll need to determine the national legislations that apply to your cold emails and ensure GDPR compliance.

For more information on sending GDPR compliant marketing messages, read my article on GDPR Email Marketing.

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3. Cold email laws in the United Kingdom

In the UK, anyone processing domestic personal information, including email addresses, must comply with the DPA (Data Protection Act) 2018 and the UK GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation).

Since Brexit, the E.U. GDPR does not apply unless you are in the U.K. and your recipients are E.U. citizens who live outside of the U.K.

However, the U.K.’s DPA 2018 has already enacted the E.U. GDPR’s requirements into U.K. law. The new regulation is known as the U.K. GDPR.

A. What the law states

The U.K.’s anti spam law requires companies to obtain an individual’s consent before sending marketing communications to them.

But you may be wondering:

How can I send a cold email if I have to obtain the recipient’s consent first?
After all, isn’t a cold email an electronic mail sent to someone you’ve never interacted with before?

Yes, that’s true.
Unfortunately, the U.K. doesn’t seem to allow you to send cold emails to private individuals — but you can send them to corporations.

Under the U.K.’s spam law, you can send commercial emails to people who have given you consent via a third party, such as a reseller or a company within the same group as yours.

For example, if a potential customer has expressly opted in to receive emails from your parent company, you can send them emails.

You can also add recipients to your email lists if your company or a company within your group has previously done business with them, and they provided their email addresses for future marketing purposes.

However, the product or service you’re marketing must be similar or related to those the individual was buying or negotiating to buy when their email address was initially obtained.

B. How to comply

In addition to the consent laws mentioned above, there are some general rules for cold emailing in the U.K.:

  • Have a clear opt-out method: Give people a clear, easy way to unsubscribe from your mailing list.
  • Provide your business address: Include your physical address and a valid email address.
  • Obtain recipient email addresses honestly: Ensure the data is stored safely, especially individual’s personal information.
  • Resist the urge to use clickbait and deceptive subject lines: Indicate what the email is about in the subject line.

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4. Cold email laws in Canada

In Canada, you’ll need to comply with the CASL (Canada’s Anti-Spam Legislation).

Before Canada’s Anti-Spam Legislation came into effect on July 1st, 2017, cold emailing was permitted as long as you had implied consent.

For example, if the potential client did business with your company in the past, it would be reasonable to assume they would consent to receive marketing emails from you.

However, that isn’t always the case anymore.

Now, in most instances, a marketer needs a recipient’s explicit consent before sending them marketing messages.

A. What the law states

According to CASL rules, before sending a commercial electronic message, you should be able to prove that the recipient has given you consent to do so.

But still, there may be certain circumstances where implied consent is allowed.
For example, you can send a cold email to a potential client whose email address was given to you by a mutual contact who has a business relationship with the recipient.

The individual should have a legitimate interest in your offering, and the message must be relevant to their business, role, function, or duties in a company.

Note: You can’t email a recipient solely to ask for their permission to receive further communications from you.

B. How to Comply

Once you’ve obtained consent, either implied or explicit consent, there are a few rules you’ll need to follow:

  • Identify yourself as the sender and include your contact details, physical address, and a valid email address.
  • As is the case in most jurisdictions, you’ll need to have an unsubscribe option that’s quick and easy to use.
  • You’ll also need to honor unsubscribe requests promptly.

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5. Cold email laws in Australia

In Australia, the Spam Act 2003 applies to any electronic marketing material.

Your cold emails are subject to these regulations whether the mail originated within the nation’s borders or not, as long as the mail is opened in Australia.

A. What the law states

To send marketing communications, including cold emails to Australian recipients, you’ll need to obtain either express consent or inferred permission.

Express consent includes:

  • Completing a form.
  • Ticking a box on a website.
  • Agreeing telephonically.
  • Giving permission in person.

Under Australian law, inferred permission is when a person gives you their physical/email address, and it’s reasonable that they would expect to receive sales emails, cold calls, or marketing materials from you.

For example, anyone who subscribes to an account with your company is considered to have given inferred consent.

B. How to comply

Other requirements under Australia’s email and electronic marketing laws include:

  • The commercial electronic message should clearly identify the sender. Your business name should be clear and identifiable, and your contact details should be accurate.
  • Make it simple to unsubscribe — for example, by adding an unsubscribe link.

Go back to Contents

Now that you have an idea of the various laws regarding cold emailing, I’ll go over some practical guidelines to help you send successful cold emails that are also legally compliant.

4 Guidelines for Sending Cold Emails Legally

Although each country has differing requirements regarding electronic marketing messages, there are a few general guidelines that you can apply regardless of your location.

1. Only send emails to recipients who have an interest in your offering

All of the major jurisdictions we’ve looked at generally allow cold emailing in some form, as long as there’s an inferred consent or you’re emailing someone for a legitimate reason.

Refrain from using harvested lists with email addresses obtained illegally from third parties, including website crawling bots or trading lists with other companies. You can’t guarantee whether the recipients in such lists will actually be interested in your offerings.

A better way to build your mailing list is through social media sites like LinkedIn where you can find better cold leads.

For more information on finding and nurturing email leads properly, read my in-depth article

2. Make it easy for people to opt-out

When sending a cold email, you’re assuming the recipient has a legitimate interest in your offering, but they may not.

That’s why you should make it simple for them to unsubscribe and stop receiving emails from you in the future. And a quick way to do this is by adding a straightforward unsubscribe link in your email.

3. Implement strict data security measures

You must keep the personal data of your recipients secure. If recipients unsubscribe, remove them from your campaign immediately and delete their details from your database.

(Note: GMass has automatic unsubscribe management, so if people unsubscribe from your campaigns, we’ll automatically suppress any future emails you try to send to them.)

4. Avoid deceptive subject lines

One of the keys to avoid breaching an anti spam law is transparency.

And that includes being completely transparent about the purpose of your email.

That’s why you should never use clickbait — the subject line should clearly state what the message is about. This also reduces your bounce rate and the likelihood of the recipient’s spam filter blocking your mail.

And keep an eye on your cold email response rates. If you can send cold emails that generate a good number of opens and replies, you’ll be a lot better off than if no one ever bites on what you’re selling.

To learn how to send successful cold emails, check out my handy cold email marketing guide.

Go back to Contents

Is Cold Email Illegal? Conclusions and Wrapping Up

Cold emailing is legal — as long as your cold outreach strategy complies with relevant national and state laws.

To avoid breaching most anti-spam laws, you have to determine your target audience, obtain their contact information in a legally compliant way, provide them with an easy opt-out, and more.

While complying with various countries’ laws may seem challenging, not all aspects of your cold emailing campaigns need to be complicated.

Once you’ve complied with legal regulations, you can use a tool like GMass to simplify your cold outreach efforts.

With this powerful tool, you can auto-personalize your cold email marketing campaigns, track open rates, streamline follow-ups, boost email deliverability, and do so much more.

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


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Cold email vs spam is a worthwhile debate, though there’s a definitive answer.

No, cold email is not spam.

But if you have the wrong approach to cold email, some recipients (not to mention spam fighting organizations and/or governments) might think it’s spam.

And let’s face it: nobody likes spam emails. While you probably aren’t sending email spam intentionally, an innocent mistake could land your cold email in your recipient’s spam folder.

Fortunately, once you’re clear about cold email vs spam differences, you’ll be able to improve your outreach efforts with ease.

In this article, I’ll cover the key differences between cold email and spam and clarify if cold emailing is actually legal. I’ll also give you six actionable cold emailing tips to help you avoid being marked as spam.

Cold Email vs Spam: Table of Contents

(Click on the links below to jump to specific sections.)

Let’s dive in.

Cold Email vs Spam: 5 Key Differences

Although people sometimes confuse the two, cold email is not the same as spam.

Here are the five key differences between them:

1. What spam is versus what cold email is

While both are sent to recipients with whom you don’t have a pre-existing relationship, cold emails and spam refer to two different things.

Here’s what cold emails and spam emails are:

Cold emails

A cold email is an outreach message you send to someone with whom you haven’t previously interacted. When comparing a cold email versus a cold call, a cold email is similar to cold calling for B2B sales — you contact prospects to determine if they’re interested in your product or service, but you do so over email.

However, cold emails are much less intrusive and bothersome than cold calls. As a result, your prospects are more likely to be receptive to your offering if you send them a cold email.

Generally, a sales rep will send cold emails to qualified cold leads that fit their ideal customer profile. In other words, they’ve researched whether the recipient is a good fit for their offering.

Also, they’ll usually validate the recipient’s email address before sending them a cold email to ensure it’s going to the right person. (Quick plug: GMass offers a free email validation tool which you can use when you’re sending campaigns — or use anytime on the web, even if you’re not a GMass customer.)

Here’s what a cold email looks like:

cold-email-example

Interested in learning more about cold emailing?
Check out my ultimate guide to cold email for some useful pointers.

Spam emails

Spam emails are unsolicited emails to people who most often don’t want to receive them. Common examples of spam emails include sales pitches for sketchy products, unwanted newsletters, chain forwards, hoax emails, phishing scams, and more.

Usually, the recipients of spam sales emails aren’t qualified leads and don’t necessarily fit the target audience. And the senders often disguise who the emails are from in an attempt to deceive recipients.

These incoming emails are usually promotional messages that advertisers use to promote offerings to people, regardless of whether or not the product would benefit them.

As a result, unlike cold emails, these unsolicited emails are sent to countless email addresses at once. The sender usually does this without researching the target audience or confirming that the email address exists.

Not surprisingly, this type of commercial electronic message usually has a negligible reply rate. (That’s a big part of the cold email vs spam difference: Cold emails may not have massive reply rates, but they should definitely do better than spam.)

Here’s what a spam email generally looks like:

spam-email-example

Want to find out more about spam emails?
Discover what spam emails are and five ways to stop them

2. Intentional contact and personalization

Another key difference between cold emails and spam is intentionality.

A cold email makes intentional contact with prospects for a valid business reason. The best cold emails include a thoughtful, targeted email message with a specific value proposition for the right person.

In other words, the sender sends personalized emails to suit various recipients and their individual needs.

On the other hand, a spam email doesn’t include personalized information that’s addressing the recipient’s specific needs. While a cold email aims to start a conversation, there’ll usually be no conversation with a spam email — just a generic advertisement.

3. Buyer-centric vs product-centric

Cold emails typically contain relevant messages that focus on the potential buyer and the value the offering can provide the prospect.

In contrast, spam emails focus on promoting the product rather than focusing on the recipient.

While cold emails involve researching the potential customer and matching the product offering to the recipient, spam emails are usually just one generic mass email sent to hundreds or thousands of people without any tweaks.

4. Honesty about their purpose

Another critical difference between cold emails and spam is the straightforwardness about their purpose.

Cold emails are always honest about their intent. The subject lines of cold sales emails usually indicate their purpose and don’t leave the recipient guessing what the message is about.

Moreover, cold emails aim to build trust with a potential client to start a conversation about how the sender can help with the prospect’s unique pain points

After all, legitimate businesses don’t need to be secretive or hide behind a false subject line. They’ll be direct and transparent about the purpose of the email and details like contact numbers and addresses.

In contrast, spam emails mostly use ambiguous subject lines and sometimes even deceptive or clickbait subject line ploys unrelated to the actual message. Their aim is just to get the recipient to open the email.

That’s why almost all spam emails often mask themselves as a promotion or “ultimate solution” to some problem.

They usually contain misleading subject lines, gimmicks, flashy words, suspicious links, and other spam triggers. They never tell you how they got your email address or why they chose to email you specifically.

5. How the sender obtains recipient email addresses

Another key difference between spam emails and legitimate cold emails is how the sender obtains recipient contact information like their email address.

Recipient addresses for cold emails are usually obtained by searching online for prospects who would benefit from the sender’s offering.

You can browse through LinkedIn, Twitter, and other social media platforms or even use email-finding tools like Voila Norbert or Clearbit Connect to find a prospect’s email address.

Once you’ve compiled the list of emails, you can further refine your mailing list and reduce your bounce rate by using email verification tools like Bounceless, Zero Bounce — or better yet, GMass’s free email verification tool. This will ensure the addresses on the list are functional and valid.

On the other hand, spammers usually purchase mail lists or use bots that crawl the internet and compile lists of random email addresses. Then, they send emails to every address on their list, whether these addresses are functional or not, resulting in a high bounce rate.

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Now that I’ve explained how different cold emailing is from spamming let’s discuss whether it’s actually legal or not.

Is Cold Emailing Legal? (Plus How Different Entities Define Spam Versus Cold Email)

Yes, cold email is generally nice and legal.

However, each country has different regulations about the legality of cold emails, and you should research which laws apply to your commercial electronic message.

For example, in the U.S. you’re allowed to send commercial emails to people you have no relationship with as long as these emails adhere to specific CAN-SPAM Act requirements.

Here are the definitions of spam according to the U.S. and E.U., as well as according to some of the organizations fighting spam — so you can see just how cold email and spam differ.

Note: While we’re experts in email, we are not lawyers and the below is not intended as legal advice. Make sure to consult with your legal professionals surrounding any gray area with cold email.

CAN-SPAM Act: Cold email vs. spam

The CAN-SPAM Act is the U.S. law which outlines the requirements for commercial messaging.

The CAN-SPAM Act puts restrictions on “commercial electronic mail messages,” which it defines as a message where, “the primary purpose … is the commercial advertisement or promotion of a commercial product or service (including content on an internet website operated for a commercial purpose.”

However, it gives quite a bit of leeway for “transactional” or “relationship” messages. And the Federal Trade Commission has clarified CAN-SPAM “doesn’t require initiators of commercial email to get recipients’ consent before sending … there is no opt-in requirement.”

CAN-SPAM classifies a commercial message as spam if it uses “header information that is materially false or materially misleading” — meaning a false or misleading “from” line, email address or domain name, or IP address.

It also classifies a message as spam if it uses a misleading subject line, does not have “clear and conspicuous identification that the message is an advertisement or solicitation,” does not have a valid “physical postal address of the sender,” and does not include the ability to opt-out.

So as long as you’re straightforward with your subject lines, who you are, and what you’re selling — and as long as you give recipients a chance to opt out and honor their opt-out requests — your cold emails should not hit the CAN-SPAM definition of spam.

As for non-commercial messages — CAN-SPAM isn’t interested in those. Non-commercial bulk email is not defined as spam under CAN-SPAM, so if you’re sending mass emails that aren’t at all commercial, technically you don’t even have to include an unsubscribe link. (This is true for political campaign emails as well, even though those are asking for money.)

GDPR: Cold email vs. spam

GDPR, which is the E.U.’s set of laws around data privacy (including emails), is generally stricter than the U.S. CAN-SPAM Act. However, it does carve out room for cold email.

While GDPR does not set a specific definition of spam, it states that “processing” (the use of a person’s data, including their email address) is only legal when that person “has given consent to the processing of his or her personal data for one or more purposes” and/or, among other things, “processing is necessary for the purposes of the legitimate interests pursued by the [sender].”

It later goes on to further discuss what constitutes “legitimate interest” — and according to a leading privacy consulting firm in the E.U., distinguishes that, “if a company has a justified interest in ‘cold’ calling through email marketing, the marketing emails may be sent to potential customers without consent.”

But, as soon as a customer opts-out, the company needs to stop emailing them immediately to avoid violating GDPR. (Check out our article on GDPR for more on how to stay compliant with GDPR for cold email.)

Spamhaus: Cold email vs. spam

The Spamhaus Project is a nonprofit that tracks spammers around the world; it maintains several lists of spammers (domains, IPs, and more) which email service providers use to block spam from reaching their users.

Spamhaus defines spam as “unsolicited bulk email.” Unsolicited meaning a person “has not granted verifiable permission for the message to be sent”; bulk meaning “the message is sent as part of a larger collection of messages, all having substantively identical content.”

And an email has to be both unsolicited and bulk to be spam. That means sending a one-on-one email unsolicited, like a single cold email, would not fall under its definition. Nor would bulk emails where subscribers have opted in, like a newsletter.

Spamhaus does not make a commercial/non-commercial exception; even non-commercial unsolicited bulk emails fall under their definition of spam.

So how do you carve out an exception for your cold emails? Through how you gather your email addresses and through personalization of your messages.

If you’re highly customizing your cold emails to your recipients — speaking to their specific problems and your solution to those problems — it’s fair to say your messages no longer have “substantively identical content.” Check out GMass’s feature to personalize entire paragraphs — that’s a great step toward making sure your emails are substantively different.

Abuse.net: Cold email vs. spam

Abuse.net is a database of domains that are known for (or accused of) sending spam, as well as a resource center for finding ways to report spam.

While it doesn’t have its own original definition of spam, it does say: “Most abusive mail has forged return address information, so the To: ,From:, and Reply-To: addresses are not the actual source of the message.”

In other words: Spam emails are intended to deceive. And cold emails are different; they aren’t based around deception. You’ll use your actual to:, from:, and reply-to: addresses. (Especially if you use a service like GMass, where you send cold emails from inside your Gmail account).

You’ll state clearly who you are, where you’re located, and what you’re offering. There’s no attempt to fool anyone — which differentiates cold email from spam according to Abuse.net.

SORBS: Cold email vs. spam

SORBS (Spam and Open Relay Blocking System), runs a DNS-based block list of servers that have a history of sending spam, phishing emails, and other malicious emails.

They define the following four types of email as spam: unsolicited commercial email, unsolicited bulk email, unsolicited religious email, and unsolicited political email. They also say solicited email is not spam.

As for cold email, they offer a litmus test on whether or not an unsolicited message is spam: “A good test as to whether any particular message you might send will be considered to be spam is to ask the question, ‘Is the sender going to benefit more than the receiver of the message?’ … Tip: An offer of a discounted item is going to benefit the sender more than the recipient.”

What does that mean for cold email? Under the SORBS definition, it should be clear just how wildly beneficial your offering is to your recipient. That would most likely include a personalized email speaking to their needs and an unambiguous and targeted demonstration of how your offering is legitimately valuable to the recipient.

URIBL and SURBL: Cold email vs. spam

Neither URIBL nor SURBL set a specific definition for spam; instead, they gauge what emails are and are not spam based on the links in those emails. URIBL maintains a list of “domains that appear in spam” based on third-party reports and testing; SURBL says its lists are “websites that have appeared in unsolicited messages.”

In other words, they’re only concerned with the links within a spam message, not the domain name, IP address, or anything else on the sending side. The implication there: If you have spammy links, you’re sending spam; if you don’t, you’re not.

As a cold emailer, that should be one of your biggest reason to take a few minutes to set up a custom tracking domain.

When you track clicks in an email, every link goes through a tracking domain — so that tracking domain will appear in your email. If you’re using your email platform’s default tracking domain, you’re sharing it with other emailers… some of them might send emails that are classified as spam… and that could mean you emails wind up on a block list due to association.

While GMass, like every other high-quality email platform, is always working hard to keep spammers away and keep clean tracking domains, someone can slip through the cracks from time to time. With a custom tracking domain, you won’t have to worry about that.

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Now that you’re very well-versed in how different entities define spam versus cold email, let’s talk strategies for making sure your cold emails aren’t incorrectly or unfairly classified as spam.

6 Handy Cold Emailing Tips To Avoid Being Marked as Spam

If you don’t perform cold emailing correctly, your emails could land in your recipient’s spam folder.
Here are seven practical tips to help you avoid this:

1. Don’t use deceptive email subject lines

It can be tempting to add whatever subject line you think will hook your prospect when sending your cold emails, but this is actually a terrible strategy.

Remember, the subject line of your cold email should accurately reflect what the email is about.

For example, avoid using a subject line like “free gift awaits you” if you aren’t actually offering a free gift. Most people won’t even bother opening incoming emails with these deceptive subject lines.

Additionally, phrases like “limited offer” or “urgent” are usually spam triggers, and spam filters could send your email directly to the spam folder.

Here are some great cold email subject lines:

  • “Did you know [the recipient’s competitor] ranks higher than you for ‘[keyword]’? Here’s why.”
  • “A new idea for reaching your target market”
  • “Are you on track to hit your Q3 goals (I have some advice that may help)”

Wondering how to write a good cold email subject line?
Read my post on 43 cold email subject lines that get your emails opened instantly.

2. Remove inactive email addresses from your email list

For an effective email lead generation process, you must regularly update your email list. This includes removing all inactive email addresses.

Sending emails to inactive addresses results in hard bounces, which alert spam filters about the percentage of bounced emails you’ve sent. This could cause your future emails to be marked spam and go directly to the spam box, negatively affecting your sender reputation.

That’s why you should identify and remove disposable mail IDs, spam traps, and shared email addresses from your mailing list.

Fortunately, with a cold email tool like GMass, which includes a free email verification service, you can easily verify the addresses in your emailing list. When you use the email verification tool, only email addresses that pass the verification test will receive your cold email outreach campaign.

GMass also has automatic bounce management and unsubscribe management — which will automatically suppress future emails you send to hard bounce addresses and people who’ve unsubscribed.

3. Allow recipients to opt-out

It’s essential to allow recipients to easily opt-out of your email list if they aren’t interested in what you have to say or just don’t want to receive commercial emails.

Otherwise, you run the risk of receiving spam complaints in addition to compliance issues.

Most companies usually include a single line underneath their email text with an unsubscribe link or opt-out option instructions. You could also have a line telling recipients to reply to your email and ask to be removed from your mailing list instead.

4. Ensure your email address is authenticated

To ensure your emails aren’t marked as spam, you need to ensure that your email address is authenticated and verified with SPF, DKIM, and DMARC records.

Here’s what each of these records is:

  • SPF (Sender Policy Framework):  identifies whether the sender used an authorized mail server to send the email.
  • DKIM (DomainKeys Identified Mail): applies an encrypted email signature to verify whether emails are authentic.
  • DMARC (Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting & Conformance): helps the sender validate email protection with SPF and DKIM authentications.

Without these protocols in place, the recipient’s spam filter will find it difficult to verify your email, and it could be flagged as spam.

You can use GMass’s free Email Analyzer tool to test your SPF, DKIM, and DMARC records and more to see where you currently stand.

5. Test your emails to see what might make them go to spam

It’d be great to know in advance if an email you’re about to send is destined for the inbox or the spam folder.

Fortunately, there’s an easy way to find that out — and to test what tweaks might improve your inbox deliverability.

We’ve built the Spam Solver here at GMass — a one-of-a-kind tool that tests out your campaign to determine whether or not it’s likely to wind up as spam. With the Spam Solver, GMass will send your email to 20 mailboxes we’ve configured with different settings — then report back how often you wind up in the inbox, spam folder, or Gmail promotional folder.

From there, you can adjust settings in the Spam Solver to see if they make a difference on your deliverability.

6. Use email outreach tools

Even if a salesperson does everything right, there’s still the possibility of their emails being marked as spam.

That’s why my last piece of advice is to leverage email outreach tools to streamline your cold emailing efforts.

And the best tool for sending a successful email campaign is GMass.

gmass

GMass is a powerful cold email marketing tool that works right inside Gmail.

Due to its advanced outreach capabilities and ease of use, it’s favored by employees of large companies like Google and social media titans like LinkedIn and Twitter. But GMass is also suitable for small businesses, solopreneurs, and startups.

With GMass, you can:

Additionally, here’s how GMass can help your cold emails avoid the spam folder:

A. The Email Delivery Wizard

The email deliverability wizard offers data-driven solutions to improve your sender reputation.

For example, the tool can help you answer questions like:

  • How does verification affect email deliverability?
  • What SMTP services can help you bypass Google’s sending limits?
  • Can delaying your emails increase your open rate?

GMass’s email deliverability wizard helps you answer these questions so you can create effective campaigns with ease.

delivery-wizard

B. Improve Email Deliverability with Custom Tracking Domain

With GMass, you can set up a custom tracking domain to send cold emails to prospects, safeguarding your mail from the dreaded spam filter.

Why is this important?
Some spam filters catalog domains commonly found in spam messages, so if your emails contain the same tracking domain as a spammer’s emails, your emails can also get blocked.

GMass lets you replace the default domains and use a branded tracking domain name, like, link.XCompany.com. This feature works whether you’re using a Google Workspace or a Gmail account.

Using a custom domain can improve your domain reputation and email deliverability. It can also help your email avoid the recipient’s spam box as you aren’t using a shared domain.

For more information, check out my post on how you can set up your dedicated tracking domain with GMass.

C. Automatic Email Personalization

Remember, the best cold emails are buyer-centric and aim to provide value to the potential customer. They don’t just include a generic, impersonal script.

Fortunately, with GMass, you can automatically personalize your emails in bulk on a recipient-by-recipient basis. You can personalize various parts of your email like:

This way, your emails are more likely to land in your recipient’s inbox, boosting your open and reply rate.

personalize-email

To get started with GMass, simply download the Chrome extension and sign up with your Gmail account. Additionally, Android users can also download the Gmail add-on to stay productive on the go.

Go back to Contents 

Cold Email vs Spam: Final Thoughts

When it comes to cold email vs spam, the main difference is that cold emails aim to provide value to the potential client while spam emails don’t.

And while most types of spamming are dishonest and illegal, cold emailing is perfectly legal when done correctly.

Use the tips I covered here to ensure your cold emails don’t land in your recipients’ spam folders. Additionally, with a cold email tool like GMass in hand, you can use the world’s most trusted Gmail IP address to send personalized cold emails!

GMass also offers custom tracking domains, an email delivery wizard, and an automated spam solver to streamline your cold emailing efforts.

Why not try out GMass today to send effective cold email campaigns with ease?

See why 99% of users say they’ve had their best deliverability ever with GMass


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The cold email vs cold call debate continues, with some arguing that cold calling is a technique that firmly belongs in the past.

Despite that, there are still situations where cold calling reigns.

However, regardless of which cold outreach method you use, the end goal is essentially the same: ensuring you convert as many leads as possible.

In this article, I’ll highlight six key differences between the two outreach methods and help you decide which outreach strategy works best for your needs. I’ll then offer some actionable tips on improving both your cold calling and cold emailing efforts.

Cold Email vs Cold Call: Table of Contents

(Click on links to jump to specific sections)

Let’s get started.

Cold Email vs Cold Call: 6 Key Differences

Both cold emailing and cold calling can be effective at generating leads for your business.
However, there are several differences between the two outreach efforts.

Let’s look at six of these differences now:

1. How personal the experience is

Creating a personal experience for the lead or prospect is critical to a successful sales pitch.
While both emails and calls lend themselves to personalization, they aren’t on equal footing.

A. Cold calling

While the mere mention of a cold call is enough to turn off some prospects, many experts argue that cold calling is still valuable for a prospecting B2B sales team. This is because cold calling a potential customer could create a more personalized experience for the recipient.

How is cold calling more personal?
Simply speaking with someone on the phone is a personal experience that allows the cold caller to create a small individual connection with the recipient. On the other hand, it’s challenging to achieve the same connection through email.

Moreover, cold calling offers a more dynamic experience since you can adjust your strategy to fit your prospect’s needs as the conversation happens.

B. Cold emailing

In comparison, cold emails don’t achieve quite the same level of intimacy.

However, you can (and should) always send personalized emails. Doing so can dramatically increase the efficacy of how you start cold emails and follow through on your outreach.

Another benefit of cold emailing is that it’s possible to automate much of this personalization through software. This way, cold emailing outreach is considerably more effective and scalable, especially since you can personalize your outreach to multiple recipients.

2. How disruptive it is to the prospect

It’s important to consider how your outreach will impact your lead. You’re off to a bad start if your cold outreach annoys a warm lead by disrupting their routine.

A. Cold calling

While it may be a more personal experience, cold calling is considered the “old-school” approach for several reasons. One of those reasons is that receiving a cold call out of the blue can be invasive and disruptive to your prospect.

That’s why many people aren’t receptive to receiving cold calls.

As a cold caller, you may also find that the cold lead is less likely to turn into a warm lead when they become frustrated at an unwanted interruption.

However, that’s only if they pick up in the first place: It takes an average of eight cold call attempts before you connect with a prospect.

B. Cold emailing

By comparison, cold emails are far less disruptive.

And you don’t need to get lucky and catch the recipient at their desk as you do when cold calling. Additionally, recipients have the flexibility to open and respond to emails at their convenience.

Emails are also far less time-consuming, unlike cold calls. Consider that phone calls tend to last for several minutes, while even the most informative email takes only a couple of minutes to read.

Also, if you’re wondering: Is cold email illegal?… no. Make sure you’re up on the regulations in your country and the countries to which you’re sending. But there’s a big difference between cold email vs spam, and your emails should stay on the correct side of the ledger. Cold calling has its own set of battles like these as well, between no-call lists and solicitation rules.

3. Gathering information

Gathering relevant information is one of the more common reasons for cold outreach.
When communicating with cold leads, consider which method is best for gathering valuable information.

A. Cold calling

While both methods can effectively gather valuable information, such as the prospect’s pain point and what they hope to accomplish, cold calling might be the better approach.

Why?
The sales rep can use cold calling to gather relevant info about the lead while making a human connection at the same time.

When you call someone and talk to them then and there, you may find they’re more willing to provide valuable information. Moreover, an experienced salesperson might be able to coax more information from a prospect with a well-scripted sales pitch.

Moreover, you can use the call as an opportunity to gain valuable insights that’ll help you down the line, such as the prospect’s personality — which can be more challenging to establish over email.

B. Cold emailing

Since emails are entirely text-based, it’s that much more challenging to make a persuasive argument. Having said that, if you’re only reaching out to ask a simple question, email is surely the way to go.

Additionally, keep in mind that, from the prospect’s point of view, it can be easier to make good decisions with an email.

How?
When calling, you might catch them off-guard with a question, and the recipient might feel pressured since you are waiting for their response.

But when emailing, the prospect has an opportunity to word their response correctly if they’re not interested in the offer. This way, cold emailing can be a more effective means of gathering valuable information about the lead.

4. Success rate

Here’s how cold calling and cold emailing differ on their success rate:

A. Cold calling

While cold calling can drum up new business, the results can be inconsistent.

Why?
Aside from the gatekeepers (like voicemail, caller ID, or secretaries) you need to get past, you also have to catch the lead at their desk. Even then, there’s no guarantee if you’ve caught them at a good time.

In fact, 58% of prospects admit to finding sales calls useless, while another study found that 87% of prospects feel that salespeople don’t properly understand their needs.

And it gets worse.

According to one study, of the 6,264 cold calls made over two weeks, only 19 appointments were made. That gives cold calling a success rate of 0.3%.

B. Cold emailing

On the flip side, the average cold email response rate is 1% to 5%.

You can even take the right steps to significantly increase the number of successful cold emails you send. For instance, sending targeted emails can increase your response rate to between 15 and 25%.

Additionally, cold emails provide the opportunity to include some social proof, like user testimonials. Social proof serves as a powerful means of advertising, with 88% of consumers trusting online reviews as much as personal recommendations.

You can also include additional material you feel could benefit the recipient, such as a link to a blog post.

5. Trackability

Both cold calling and cold emailing have good trackability, and you can use the right software to help enhance your outreach efforts.

A. Cold calling

By tracking your cold calls with the right tools, you can improve your lead generation by tracing the source of a call to a specific campaign. You can also gain valuable insights into KPIs like the number of outgoing calls, the average call time, answer rate, and more.

Most cold calling tools also offer automated dialing, call recording, and access to analytics to streamline the process.

Some popular cold calling software includes Myphoner, VanillaSoft, and Toky.

B. Cold emailing

Since emails are entirely digital, they’re far easier to distribute and monitor.

This makes it easy to track important email metrics like open rate, click-through rate, number of unsubscribes, and more.

By tracking your sales emails, you can gain valuable insights into what works well and what needs improvement for future email campaigns.

Fortunately, email automation software like GMass helps you accurately track vital email metrics with ease. The tool also lets you personalize and automate various cold emailing aspects, making the outreach process effortless.

6. Scalability

Here’s how both cold outreach methods differ based on scalability:

A. Cold calling

Not every salesperson will be equally skilled at making cold calls. Sure, you can train your salespeople to improve their skills, but this costs time and money.

Additionally, to effectively scale your cold calls, you need to expand your sales team. This can be expensive, especially if you hire people who need further training.

B. Cold emailing

Cold emailing is cheaper and more efficient, making it much more scalable than cold calling.

In the time you’d need to make one sales call, you can send several sales emails. Additionally, you don’t need to hire and train new salespeople to scale your cold emailing efforts.

Go back to Contents

Now that we’ve covered six primary differences between cold calls and cold emails, let’s look at some factors contributing to the success of each outreach method.

Cold Email vs Cold Call: Which Sales Strategy Should You Choose?

Rather than deciding between one or the other, you might find that both cold outreach methods have a place within your sales cadence. Combining the best of both approaches can have a dramatic impact on your sales and marketing campaign performance.

However, the method you use for each situation should depend on:

1. The goal of the outreach

Are you looking to schedule a meeting or get answers to a few questions?
Determining your ask will help you decide whether to cold call or email.

It’s also worthwhile categorizing your ask as either weak or strong.

A strong ask could be something that requires commitment from your lead, such as a request for a product trial. Whereas a weak ask is more straightforward, like asking your lead for feedback.

Now, if you’re going with a strong ask, pick up the phone.

Since these requests will be asking more from the prospect, it’s an excellent opportunity for sales reps to use their closing skills to secure a “yes,” which is much easier over the phone.

But if you’re not asking for much, draft an email.
It’s best to avoid unnecessarily taking up the prospect’s time when a short email can do the job just as well.

2. The buyer persona

A buyer persona is a semi-fictional representation of your ideal buyers, based on market research and real data gathered from your existing customers.

Some buyer personas will have a communication preference that you should take into account. Many factors can influence their preference, such as age, their job, and more.

Generally, most millennials prefer email communication, with 75% avoiding phone calls because they’re unnecessarily time-consuming.  If your target audience is younger buyers, this is something to keep in mind.

On the other hand, older leads or professionals in customer-centric roles might be more comfortable speaking over the phone since that’s what they’re typically used to. People in these roles are also less likely to be intimidated by a B2B sales call.

Cater to whichever preference the potential client has, and you’ll find it much easier to communicate your value proposition effectively.

Go back to Contents

Now that we’ve looked at some situations where one outreach method may be preferable over the other, let’s see how you can improve your cold outreach.

How to Improve Your Cold Outreach Efforts

Irrespective of which approach you prefer, you still need to fine-tune your efforts to ensure you’re getting the best results.

A. How to improve your cold calling response rate

While some may argue that cold calling is a thing of the past, the fact is a well-trained sales representative can use cold calling to hold the prospect’s attention effectively.  A study found that more than half of the high-level buyers prefer receiving a cold call.

With that in mind, let’s take a look at three practical tips to improve your cold calling:

Tip #1: Narrow your target audience

Cold calling is much less time-efficient than cold emailing, with the average sales rep spending seven minutes on a cold call.

As such, you want to ensure you’re speaking to the right person and not someone who has no intention of making a purchase.

To avoid this, spend adequate time researching the potential customer and build a list of phone numbers belonging to only high-quality leads. Doing so can have a considerable impact on your conversion rate.

Tip #2: Get the timing right

Cold calls get a bad rap because they can be extremely disruptive to the recipient. As a result, getting the timing right is critical in building an effective sales cadence.

To avoid voicemail and annoying the lead, ensure you’re calling at the best possible time. Generally, the most effective time to make a cold call is right before lunch or closer to the end of the day on Wednesdays and Thursdays.

However, tons of factors contribute to the chances of having a lead convert to a prospect.

As such, you should experiment to find which times and days work best for your business and target audience.

Tip #3: Listen to the prospect

Effectively listening to your lead goes a long way in building trust. It allows the prospect to feel heard and valued and can provide the opportunity to learn more about their pain point.

In fact, studies have shown that there’s a ratio the sales representative making cold calls should follow — the sales professional should speak 43% of the time and listen for the remaining 57%.

Go back to Contents

Next, let’s go over a few tips to improve your cold emailing.

B. How to improve your cold emailing efforts

Cold emailing may have a bad reputation, thanks to the plethora of spammy and poorly written emails out there.
But when done right, cold emailing remains one of the most effective means of generating sales.

Here are three straightforward tips to improve your cold emailing campaigns:

Tip #1: Make it personal

The most important thing you can do when cold emailing is to use personalization.

If you don’t include any personalization, it’s a safe bet to say your email is going directly to the trash or spam folder the minute it hits your prospects’ inboxes.

Instead, each potential client will feel like they’re more than a name on a list when you send them personalized emails, boosting your response rates. In fact, one study found personalization increased click-through rates by 139%.

You can personalize an email body by mentioning the lead’s name or company name, your name, and how you found them.

You should also ensure your email is about the recipient and how you can help them with their unique goals and challenges. This shows them that you’ve done your research and are genuinely interested in helping them out.

Pro Tip: If you’re confused about how to compose a great cold email, you can always use some cold email templates to get started quickly.

Tip #2: Have a compelling subject line

With so much spam and clickbait emails going around, people want to know immediately that opening your email is worth their time. And about 35% of people decide whether to read an email based on the subject line alone.

That’s why you need to ensure you craft a subject line that can grab the prospect’s attention.

Ideally, you need to convince the lead to open your email in about six to 10 words. Research found that subject lines of this length generated an open rate of 21%.

If you’d like to know more, have a look at my article on cold email subject lines for some best practices and examples.  

Tip #3: Use cold email software to eliminate tedious tasks

We’ve built GMass to be one of the best cold emailing tools available today — and with more than 7,500 reviews in the Chrome web store, you’ll see lots of folks agree.

Gmass

GMass is a powerful cold emailing and marketing automation software that works entirely inside Gmail. It’s widely used by employees in tech giants like Google and Uber and social media platforms like Twitter and Linkedin.

GMass is also perfect if you’re a small business owner, working in a startup, or an individual sales professional.

GMass helps boost your sales activity by letting you:

To get started with GMass, download the Chrome extension and sign up for a free trial using your Gmail account.

Go back to Contents

Cold Email vs Cold Call: Wrapping Up

While some experts argue that the cold call is dead, there are still some situations where a cold call is preferable, like creating a personal experience or reaching out to decision-makers or the business owner.

But generally, sending a cold email is a safer bet.

However, there are still some things to keep in mind to make your emails stand out. Including personalization in the subject line and body of your email is a great place to start.

And when it comes to cold emails, using tools like GMass is a surefire way to streamline your outreach efforts. From auto-personalization to sending behavior-based campaigns, GMass can help you every step of the way.

Why not try GMass today and see the results for yourself?

Ready to send better emails and save a ton of time?


GMass is the only tool for marketing emails, cold emails, and mail merge — all inside Gmail. Tons of power but easy to learn and use.


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You can now use the Zapier integration for GMass.

Technically it’s still in beta and hasn’t been officially approved by Zapier yet, but that should happen soon.

Give me the link!

First, you’ll need to create an API key in GMass (login required).

Then, go here for the GMass Zapier integration. This is version 1.2.0 and was released in February 2023.

What can you do?

A Zapier integration consists of triggers and actions.

Triggers are events that happen inside your GMass account that can cause other actions in Zapier to follow. For example, an unsubscribe in your GMass account [trigger] could result in that same unsubscribe being sync’d with your MailChimp account [action].

Actions are events that you want to happen in GMass after a trigger in some other app fires. For example, you could set up a zap on a Google Form such that when a person submits your form [trigger], GMass sends a confirmation email to that person [action].

What are all the GMass triggers and actions?

Triggers:

  • Email Opened
  • Email Clicked
  • Email Replied To
  • Email Address Unsubscribed
  • Email Bounced
  • Email Sent

Actions:

  • Send a transactional email
  • Unsubscribe an email from your account
  • Unsubscribe an email from a particular campaign

You might be wondering if there’s an action to add a new contact to an automated campaign in GMass. Yes, there is! It’s just not listed as a GMass action. GMass is heavily integrated with Google Sheets, and GMass’s automated campaign feature works by looking for new rows in a Google Sheet and sending your campaign and sequences to those new rows. So, if you want to use Zapier to add a new contact to an existing campaign, use the action that adds a new row to a Google Sheet. GMass will then detect the new row and send to the new contact. GMass does this natively (not through Zapier).

Note that there’s also a Google Sheets trigger for adding a new spreadsheet row. That is not what you want. You want the action for creating a new row, if you’re wanting to automate adding people to your GMass campaign as a result of activity in some other app.

In fact, when connecting GMass to other apps via Zapier, look at not only the GMass triggers and actions but you should also look at the triggers and actions for Google Sheets.

Other integration options

Zapier is one of several ways you can integrate GMass with other apps. Many non-coders like Zapier for its no-code approach. If you are a developer, you can also integrate using our traditional API and our webhooks API.

See why 99% of users say they’ve had their best deliverability ever with GMass


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You’ve determined that emails you send with GMass are going to the Spam folder or are getting blocked. You’ve already taken these steps to determine that GMass is not causing the issue. So now what do you do?

Now you get to work to see if you can isolate the cause and fix it. GMass provides a bunch of tools to help you do that. In fact, you don’t even need to be a GMass user to use most of these tools.

The Spam Solver

Use the spam solver to test variations of your email to see if it improves your Inbox vs Spam placement rate. Often times the cause is the reputation of your “from” domain. Obviously this doesn’t apply if you’re sending “from” a gmail.com address. One of the most popular variations to run in the Spam Solver is to send from another domain, to see if that helps.

Detailed instructions for the Spam Solver

The Email Analyzer

This will show you a basic analysis of SPF and DKIM and make sure your email is capable of being received.

Detailed instructions for the Email Analyzer

Turn on email verification

If you’ve had an issue with high bounce rates, turning on the free email verification service for your campaigns will reduce your bounce rate. A high bounce rate can lower your sending domain’s reputation which will result in more email ending up in the Spam folder. Turning on the email verification service will ensure that your campaign doesn’t sent to any obviously invalid email addresses.

If your campaigns don’t generate a lot of bounce-backs, you can ignore this step.

Detailed instructions on using the email verifier

Search our deliverability database

We publish anonymized deliverability data for all of the campaigns sent through GMass in our deliverability database. You can compare your open rates to others who are sending campaigns in the same manner as yourself. If you’re sending marketing campaigns from your @gmail.com account, then search for marketing campaigns sent from an @gmail.com address, and notice the open rates in the last 24 hours and the last week. If you’re sending cold email campaigns from your own domain, then search for cold email campaigns sent from a Google Workspace account, and again, look at the open and reply rates from recent campaigns.

This will help you gauge your email deliverability against others with the same setup.

Detailed instructions for the Email Deliverability wizard

Final Thoughts: Gmail is complex

Gmail is a complex animal that uses millions of data points and deep learning to determine what to do with an email. Ultimately, these millions of data points determine one of five options for an email message:

  • Prevent it from being sent and issue a 69585 bounce
  • Ghost it
  • Place it in the Inbox of the recipient
  • Place it in the Spam folder of the recipient
  • Place it in the Promotions folder of the recipient

Assuming that you’re not getting a 69585 bounce and your email isn’t being ghosted, the above tools can be used to give you the best possible chance for making it to the Inbox.

Ready to send better emails and save a ton of time?


GMass is the only tool for marketing emails, cold emails, and mail merge — all inside Gmail. Tons of power but easy to learn and use.


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GMass now supports webhooks for the following types of events:

  • Sends
  • Opens
  • Clicks
  • Replies
  • Unsubscribes
  • Bounces

What’s a webhook?

There’s plenty of information about webhooks on the web that you can read about, but webhooks allow GMass to call a URL on your server anytime one of the events above happens. For example, if you set a webhook on the “send” event, and then you use GMass to send a campaign to 50 people, GMass will then call your server’s URL 50 times, one for each email that is sent. If 10 of those people then “open” an email, GMass will call your “open” webhook 10 times, one for each of those “open” events. Webhooks allow you to sync the data inside GMass with your own system. Your server receives this information and can record it in your database or CRM system.

Setting up your webhooks

Just navigate to the Webhooks section in your dashboard to set up your webhooks.

Screenshot of the webhooks settings page

From here, you can choose which events for which you want to set webhooks. You don’t have to set them for all events. You can set them for only the events that matter to you. For example, you may not need to sync every single “send” event with your own system. You may only be interested when somebody engages with an email, so you may only be interested in opens, clicks, and replies.

Technical details

Webhooks are handled in almost real-time. They operate in a multi-threaded environment and they run in batches every few minutes.

If a particular webhook encounters anything except an HTTP 200 response when calling your URL, an error is logged. The webhook will try up to 10 times before giving up.

You can set one webhook for each of the six events. If, however, you’re using Zapier, you can still set webhooks to your own web server and also use Zapier. Integrating with Zapier will create special webhooks behind the scenes for your account that won’t show up in your Webhooks settings.

You manage your webhooks settings from the dashboard. You may notice that our API has methods to subscribe and unsubscribe to webhooks, but those are not meant for end user use. Those methods are only used by third party systems like Zapier and Integromat.

When you turn a webhook on, it applies to campaigns created from then on. It won’t apply to events that happen now from a campaign in the past.

If you turn a webhook off and then on again, you’ll have a choice of having it start with campaigns created now, or from the past as well.

Webhook logs are coming, so you can debug any issues.

A note on the “bounces” and “replies” events

Bounces and replies are detected by GMass by our reply management system. It works by scanning your account periodically looking for bounces, replies, blocks, and other types of emails that are sent back to you after you send a campaign. Because this scanning happens periodically, bounces and replies can be the slowest of webhooks to fire, because first, you have to wait for our scanner to find the bounces and replies in your account, and then after a couple minutes, the webhook will fire.

Further Reading

Webhooks “push” events to your server. You may also be interested in our traditional API, which lets you “pull” information from GMass.

Our favorite site to easily test webhooks is webhook.site. It will generate a random URL that you can use to trigger a webhook to, and it will show you when the hook sends information over.

See why 99% of users say they’ve had their best deliverability ever with GMass


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Sending great cold recruiting emails could be the difference between attracting a star candidate and losing them.

But how do you reach out to multiple passive candidates effectively?
Similarly, how do you cold email referred candidates at scale?

A simple cold recruiting email template could be the answer.

In this article, I’ll offer eight no-nonsense cold recruiting email templates to help you win candidates in different scenarios. Then, I’ll suggest seven practical tips to enhance the effectiveness of your recruiting emails.

Also, before we dive in, if you need a high-level look at the right way to use cold email templates and adapt them for your purposes, make sure to check out our guide.

Recruiting Email Templates: Table of Contains

(Click on a link to jump to the specific section.)

Let’s get started.

8 No-Nonsense Cold Recruiting Email Templates

Cold emailing is an incredibly effective way of connecting with a prospective candidate.

Why?
Unlike cold calling, it’s less intrusive and much more scalable.

And while there’s a lot that goes into writing excellent cold emails, you can use cold email templates to save time and effort and get started quickly.

Here, I’ll provide a handy cold recruiting email template for eight different talent acquisition scenarios. Feel free to use whichever template you think will best attract candidates.

Template #1: When Reaching Out to a Passive Candidate

Subject line: [Company name] wants people like you, [first name]

Hi [first name],

My name is [X], and I’m the [job position] at [company name]. 

We’re looking for someone to join our [X] team, and I came across your profile. 

[Company name] is a great place to work, and I understand if you aren’t actively looking for something new at the moment. However, if you’re open to hearing more about [company name] and the [job position], I think you’ll be excited by what we have to offer. 

Feel free to drop me a reply, and we can set up a call at your convenience. 

Looking forward to hearing from you,
[Your name]
[Your designation (for example, recruiter)]
[Company’s name]
[Your contact information]
[Social media icons (like a link to your LinkedIn and Twitter profiles)]

Template #2: Emailing a Candidate You Found on LinkedIn

Subject line: [First name], your LinkedIn profile is impressive

Hi [first name],

I recently stumbled upon your LinkedIn profile while researching potential candidates for [job opening] at [company name].  

I’ve been over it a few times, comparing it with our current open position for [job opening], and have forwarded your info to our hiring manager. We’re impressed with your expertise and think you’d make an excellent addition to [company name]. 

We are a [short description of your company]. 

I know you’re currently with [company], so this email may not be coming at the best time, but if you’re curious about our company and the position, could we set up a call at your convenience? 

Thanks for your time.
[Email signature]

Template #3: Emailing a Referred Candidate

Subject line: [Mutual connection’s name] recommended we get in touch

Hi [first name],

My name is [X], and [mutual connection’s name] forwarded me your contact info after sharing some insights into your impressive résumé. We currently have an open position for [job title] here at [company name], and I think you’ll be a perfect fit

I’ve included a link to the job offer and our company’s homepage here [link]. 

If you’re interested in the position, shoot me a quick reply, and we can set up a call sometime this week. 

Best regards,
[Email signature]

Template #4: Recruiting a Candidate Whose Work You’ve Seen Online

Subject line: Hey [first name], I enjoyed reading your blog post on [topic]

Hi [first name],

I discovered your Medium profile when researching content marketers. I did some further searching and found myself impressed by what you’ve achieved at [company name]. 

I’m with [company name], and we’re looking at expanding our content marketing team. 

Based on your skills and expertise, I think you’d be a great fit.

Would you be interested in having a quick call so we can discuss more about the position? 

Thanks,
[Email signature]

Template #5: A Short Email to Quickly Gauge Interest

Subject line: Any Interest in joining our team at [company name]?

Hi [first name],

I’m sure you get emails like this often, but I recently found your profile on [platform], and your background caught my eye. 

I’m part of the recruitment team at [company name], and I’m reaching out because I think your experience with [X] would be an excellent fit for our current job opening for [job position]. 

Here’s a link to the job description [link]. 

Would you be open to discussing more about the position?

Thanks,
[Email signature]

Template #6: Emailing a Passive Candidate for a Referral

Subject line: Looking for a professional like you, [first name]

Hey [first name],

My name is [X], and I’m the [job title] at [company name]. 

I found your information while looking through [website] and noticed you have extensive experience with [skillset or industry], which is why I’m getting in touch. 

I’m looking to hire for [job title] in [city], and we could use someone with skills like yours. 

I know that as you’re currently employed with [company], you may not be interested. But I was hoping you could put me in contact with someone who has a similar background as yourself. 

Of course, the opportunity is open to you as well. So if you’d be interested in discussing more about it, that’s fantastic too! 

Either way, I look forward to your response. 

Take care,
[Email signature]

Template #7: When Sourcing Candidates for a Hard-to-Fill Role

Subject line: [First name], your experience with [area of expertise] is perfect! 

Hi [first name],

I’ve wanted to reach out to you for some time now, but I’ve been hesitant because I see you’ve started a new position at [company name]. 

The hiring manager here at [company name] agrees that your profile on [platform] is very impressive and fits our requirements perfectly.

This could be a shot in the dark, but if you’re open to making a career move, I’m looking to hire for a [job position] at our offices in [city]. 

Would you be interested in hearing more about the position?

I understand if the timing isn’t great. Let me know your thoughts, and we can take it from there. 

Best,
[Email signature]

Template #8: A Follow-up Email If the Candidate Doesn’t Respond

Subject line: Re: [subject of the first email]

Hi [first name], 

I imagine you’re busy, but I thought I’d send you another email in case you missed my first email. 

We are a [short description of your company] looking for an experienced [position]. We think you’d be a perfect fit for the role and would love to have a quick chat with you about it. 

Could I steal you away for 10-15 minutes sometime this week, or whenever else you’re free?

Thanks,
[Email signature] 

Now that you’ve had a look at some email examples, I’ll go over some tips to further enhance your cold recruitment emails.

Go back to Contents

7 Practical Tips on Crafting Effective Cold Recruitment Emails

Here are seven tips to help create fantastic cold sourcing emails:

1. Source the Right Candidates

As a recruiter, simply sending out a blanket email to every prospect in the job hunt is a bad idea. It comes off as spammy and reduces your chances of making a solid impression.

Additionally, there’s no guarantee that every person you reach out to is a good fit.

That’s why the success of your cold emailing recruitment efforts hinges on contacting the right job seekers. You can avoid losing time and find a great candidate by ensuring they possess the skills you’re seeking.

To start your sourcing emails right, it’s best to compile your own list of potential candidates by going through LinkedIn and other job boards.

Ideally, when doing your research, these are the things you want to find out:

  • The candidate’s skills and qualifications
  • Their overall experience
  • Their career goals
  • Their current employment status and position

This will help narrow down the talent pool to candidates who best suit the role you’re looking to fill.

And while you’re doing your LinkedIn prospecting work, you can look at their professional experiences to gauge whether they’d be a great fit or not.

This will also allow you to learn more about the candidate, which will go a long way in your personalization efforts later.

You could even use this as a chance to warm up your potential client.

How?
Perhaps you and the candidate have mutual connections you can use as an ice breaker. Or maybe, you could like and leave a comment on one of their posts. Creating even the smallest relationship can make your cold outreach that much more effective.

2. Put Some Time into Your Email Subject Line

All that research you’ve done will be for nothing if the candidate never opens your cold emails.

And, often, it comes down to the subject line to grab the prospect’s attention and get them to open your email.

When crafting your subject line, there are a few things you should keep in mind:

  • Length: Be mindful of your subject line’s length; you don’t want to make it too long. Doing so risks having the end cut off, especially if the candidate reads your email on their mobile phone. You also want to avoid making it too short. The ideal length is between 36-50 characters.
  • Clarity: This point ties in with length. While short and sweet is often the best way to go, it’s not always the case with subject lines. By opting for fewer words, you risk making the subject unclear and annoying the candidate. Ensure that your subject line isn’t ambiguous.
  • Make sure they’re not spammy: Much like sales emails, you need to be critical of your subject lines.
    If it showed up in your inbox would it stand out from the hundreds of other cold emails you get? Does it get to the point, or does it sound a little too good to be true? If your subject line is something like “make millions with this once in a lifetime opportunity,” you risk being flagged as a sender of spam emails.
  • Personalization: Personalization isn’t just reserved for the body of your email; it’s essential to include some in your subject line as well. One study found that personalized emails increase the chances of having them read by 37%.

Ultimately, the best course of action would be to experiment with your subject lines to find what works for you. What works in some sectors might not work in others, but you’ll be able to fine-tune your subject lines with time for the best results.

3. Personalize Your Email

Whether you’re sending recruiting emails or cold follow-up emails, you should always sprinkle in some personalization.

You might think that you could save time by using generic emails when sourcing talent. But you have an opportunity to craft a targeted message using all that research you did earlier.

How much personalization you want to include is up to you, but it’s generally a good idea to go beyond including just the potential candidate’s name.

You could drop obscure facts about the candidate, but be careful not to go too far and risk creeping out job seekers.

If you share a passion, drop it in, but the most important thing here is to include relevant information to show that you’ve done more than just looking up their name.

You could also try some flattery. Consider mentioning something that you thought stood out on their profile, such as any projects they’ve worked on or something they’ve accomplished. Mention to them what impressed you most and why.

4. Focus on Them, Not You

When you reach out to a potential candidate regarding a job offer, don’t make the whole email about you and your requirements. People’s time is precious and explaining the basics here is a waste of everybody’s time.

Instead, if you’re unsure how much detail you need, include a sentence or two on what your company does and mention the open role. Bear in mind that you can go into more detail once the candidate has expressed some interest in a job interview.

The most important thing to remember here is to put the focus on them and their career. You could also consider including some data or social proof to pique the prospect’s attention.

5. Keep It Short

Your first thought might be to include everything the candidate on the job hunt needs to decide.

The problem?
If your email is as long as an essay, your chances of the candidate reading it plummet.

At this stage in the cold outreach, it’s about making contact with the right person. And the best way to do this is to keep it brief by including only the key things needed to get your point across.

Remember, you can always include links to your company’s homepage and the job description so the candidate can find out more information if they need it. The job interview is the best time to get into the specifics of the position.

Ideally, you want to aim for an email of about 50 to 125 words for the best response rates.

6. Make It Clear

In addition to keeping your email on the shorter side, it’s essential to make it clear and concise.

Of course, nobody sends out a confusing email on purpose — but sometimes people make it unintentionally confusing by omitting certain details or using industry jargon.

One of the reasons for this is a phenomenon known as the “curse of knowledge.”
When you’ve spent many years working in an industry or an organization, you begin to use the language you’re most familiar with, even if it’s not often used by others.

A lot of jobs have their own jargon that someone in another organization or industry may not understand. When writing your email to the candidate about an open role, be careful about using buzzwords.

Even if they’re familiar with the terminology, it can have detrimental effects. For instance, a study by New York University found that using jargon led people to believe a company was lying.

7. Use Automation Software

Recruiting is not easy.

Identifying potential candidates, researching those candidates, reaching out to the best ones to find that great candidate, and then following up are all time-intensive activities.

Without utilizing the right tools, this interview process takes longer than it needs.
Fortunately, there’s cold email automation software that can make your life a lot easier.

Workable is an excellent recruitment tool you can use to help find and evaluate candidates. You can also consider using tools like SourceHub to search many social networks at once, cutting down on the time-consuming task of sourcing candidates.

Alternatively, you could consider letting a recruitment agency handle the lead generation and job application aspects for you. However, handling it yourself gives you far more control over the process.

Once you’ve identified a list of potential candidates, you can reach out and even send several follow-up emails with GMass.

What’s that?

GMass is a powerful email outreach and marketing tool capable of working directly inside Gmail.

It’s popular among employees in large tech conglomerates like LinkedIn, Twitter, Uber, and Google. But GMass is also perfect if you’re a solopreneur, small business owner, startup founder, or recruiting professional looking to streamline your hiring process.

With GMass, you can:

To start using GMass, all you need to do is download the GMass extension from the Chrome store and sign up for a free trial with your Gmail account.

Go back to Contents

A Cold Recruiting Email Template Can Do Wonders for You

As difficult as sending a cold recruiting email can be, it’s a vital part of the recruitment process. By utilizing the tips and templates in this guide, you’ll be able to craft outstanding recruiting emails in no time.

To streamline the interview process further, consider using powerful automation software to handle the time-consuming tasks for you.

For instance, with a robust email outreach and marketing automation platform like GMass, you can auto-personalize emails, save your emails as templates, and do so much more.

Why not try GMass today and take your cold recruiting to the next level? 

Ready to send better emails and save a ton of time?


GMass is the only tool for marketing emails, cold emails, and mail merge — all inside Gmail. Tons of power but easy to learn and use.


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