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Recently we have setup a new SMTP server to send newsletters and promotional mails to our registered users. There are 5000 users who will receive newsletters on weekly basis. We are getting bounced mails, when we tried to send promotional mails first time. We have setup SPF records and domain keys as well. But we are not able to understand the reason why Yahoo blocked emails. Can you suggest how banks and other big websites send emails with out any problem?

Here is the content of bounced mail that was sent by Yahoo.

Could not deliver message to the following recipient(s):

Failed Recipient: [email protected] Reason: Remote host said: 421 4.7.0 [TS01] Messages from xx.xx.xx.xx temporarily deferred due to user complaints - 4.16.55.1; see http://postmaster.yahoo.com/421-ts01.html

Before we use new SMTP service, we used to outsource this work to third party email marketers and we did not configure SPF or domain keys that time. But it was successful. Which way actually they follow?

5 Answers 5

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If you follow the link it is pretty self explanatory. You need to rate limit your mail and if still blocked contact them. Be prepared to show that that the user opted in with logged date, ip, etc.

Maybe not in this instance but as a general rule you may need to look at the content of your message and see if it looks like spam. By slightly adjusting your mail to remove or change elements commonly seen in spam you can drastically reduce your chances of being blocked.

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  • Before we use new SMTP service, we used to outsource this work to third party email marketers and we did not configure SPF or domain keys that time. But it was successful. Which way actually they follow?
    – kris
    Jul 1, 2010 at 11:29
  • Why not ask them? How would any of us know?
    – joeqwerty
    Jul 1, 2010 at 12:33
  • They won't reveal their technical implementations...
    – kris
    Jul 1, 2010 at 12:47
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    Most of email marketeers value is that they deal with this hassle for you. So your choice is pay up and get on with your key business or contact and deal with each individual ISP that you find blocking it
    – JamesRyan
    Jul 1, 2010 at 13:49
  • What our bosses call 'promotional email' others call spam. It's harder than it looks to send that much of emails and not get noticed. I use mailman lists to do that, so it deals with delays and rate limiting.
    – coredump
    Jul 21, 2010 at 17:28
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Yahoo is a very prickly customer for volume senders. Here's a checklist:

  • Rate limit both messages per hour and connection count
  • Aggregate those values across all yahoo domains (e.g. yahoo.com, yahoo.in, yahoo.co.uk, btinternet.com and many more) as they all share live delivery records
  • Sign EVERYTHING with DKIM, even if only as an intermediary
  • Use a -all default action in your SPF
  • Add a SenderID record to make it defer to SPF, and register it with hotmail
  • For yahoo domains, remove addresses from your lists (and suppress from future additions) after a single hard bounce; it's part of their terms
  • Remove persistent bounces of any type
  • Honour unsubscribes
  • Use as many feedback loops as you can
  • Check sample messages with SpmAssassin - this won't help you against big ISPs specifically, but it will provide good suggestions
  • Don't change your IP; some feedback loops require 6 months established sending history
  • Make sure your DNS resolves both forwards and backwards
  • It might seem obvious, but don't send spam!

While certification and white-listing companies can help, they are often outrageously expensive and pretty much amount to a protection racket. Of the major ones, I'd say Habeas' SafeList is the one with the most integrity, though they are now owned by ReturnPath.

There's more too, but those are the basics. My company does all this for our mailing service and we've had peaks of over 2 million messages per day.

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Your volume probably isn't high enough to justify the extra cost, but SenderScore certification will help your deliverability to Yahoo and other providers. When I had my servers certified, my results were similar to this.

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The basic issue is reputation of Email servers. When you start fresh, people are wary of you.

Try this Email Server test. If everything there is ok, join the Whitelisting/feedback loop programs offered by providers.

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You may want to check that you've got everything setup correctly. You can do a quick check by e-mailing [email protected]

The results will be e-mailed back to you.

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