Getting Your Message Out By Email … without bringing the rest of your organisation to a halt! October 30, 2009
Posted by charitysolutions in charities, charity computers, charity IT, Email, General, Uncategorized.add a comment
In our last article (available here if you missed it) we looked at how to keep the right side of spam laws so that your domains don’t end up on blacklists resulting in your emails being blocked.
This time round we take a look at the most common methods available to send out “bulk” emails, i.e. emails to many recipients (like newsletters and appeals) as opposed to just a few recipients.
There are three major ways of sending out bulk emails:
- Via your own email client (like Outlook) – either by placing all recipients in the BCC field or by using an email distribution list
- Via a program specifically designed for sending bulk emails that is installed on a PC or server at your offices
- Via a specialist bulk email sending company like AWeber, Constant Contact or Sign-Up.to
All have pros and cons. Here are some of the key ones and our personal advice on where you can benefit – or slip up – using each of them.
Your own email client
Pros:
- It’s immediately available – probably already running on your desktop, so nothing more to pay.
- You already know how to use it.
Cons:
- It is incredibly easy to make a mistake and put recipient addressed in the To or CC field of the email – meaning that every recipients email address is sent to every person and your organisation has instantly breached both UK Data Protection laws and spam laws in every continent!
- You need to remember to put in the legal “stuff” (like registered addresses and unsubscription links) in to each email.
- You need to manage subscribe and unsubscribe requests yourself.
- Emails to more than a few recipients are likely to get blocked by the spam filters on your local PC or your email server.
- The sudden volume of outbound emails may be a lot for your email server to handle all at one time, resulting in other day-to-day emails being delayed while you server works to handle your mailing.
- If you mess anything up and your email domain gets onto any spam blacklists, you may well stop all email from your organisation from getting through and bring email communication to a total halt until you can get your organisations email server de-listed.
Even if you do it perfectly, someone can still report you for spam and it will be up to you to prove your innocence. In the world of spam blacklisting you are sadly often deemed guilty until proven innocent!
- You will need to understand what all the non-delivery reports you get back mean in order to manage re-sends and mail list removals.
If you don’t know the difference between a “hard bounce” and a “soft bounce” – and their error codes – and what you need to do if you get one or more of each type to an email address within a certain time period to keep on the right-side of spam laws, then this probably isn’t the right solution for you!
Our view:
We wouldn’t recommend this unless you only have a few (under 50) subscribers and really understand what you are doing when it comes to email legalities and email delivery and error report codes.
Dedicated bulk email program on your PC
Pros:
- They are relatively cheap to buy and you don’t have many (if any) further costs.
- They are relatively easy to use and many provide additional features – to help you design good looking emails for example or to automatically add the “legal” bits for example.
Cons:
- Most of the disadvantages listed above for personal email clients (other than the first one).
- By default, most use their own email server software to send and track emails, so you need to make sure that any anti-spam settings on your outward server (or even possibly your ISP) are configured to expect bulk emails from it.
- Not all of them are particularly accurate at tracking whether emails have reached their destination or not. As well as messing up your statistics, this can lead to you re-sending emails that were incorrectly reported as not having gone through but really had done – leading to subscribers receiving multiple copies which at best will annoy them and at worst may see you being incorrectly reported as a spammer.
- If your email recipients are split over several lists, not all of them are able to flag up duplicate sends where the same email address it in multiple lists – which means that subscribers receive multiple copies, with the same results as above.
Our view:
This can be a cheap and effective solution. But you really understand what you are doing when it comes to email legalities and email delivery and error report codes. If a paid member of staff is handling this, don’t forget to take into consideration the cost of their time learning and administering the program into account – these “hidden” ongoing costs can mean that this isn’t always the cheap and easy solution it appears to be.
Specialist bulk email sending company
Pros:
- They handle all the “legal bits” for you – all you need to worry about is the content!
- They have their own email deliver servers, which are specially designed to handle large volumes of emails quickly and efficiently.
- Most provide easy to use software for designing your emails as part of the package.
- Some include special checking software that you can run to ensure that your email isn’t likely to fall foul of spam filters or other reasons for non-delivery.
- Their software automatically handles subscribe and unsubscribe requests for you.
- Most provide extra email features like auto-responders that allow follow-up messages to be scheduled and sent automatically.
- Some include integration to other information delivery methods such as Twitter and Facebook, allowing you to reach donors and supporters in many different mediums via one single place.
- Most include tracking and analytical tools that enable you to quickly and easy monitor deliver and read rates – and report and analyse trends over time or a particular campaign.
- If anyone should make a spam complaint about one of your emails sent using one of these services, the company will help sort things out. And in the meantime, your own organisations day-to-day email won’t be affected.
Cons:
- Some offer low price (or free) trials for low subscriber numbers and/or time periods, but after that you will need to pay a monthly or yearly charge which depending on your subscriber numbers (and how often you mail then) can be significant – so costs can mount up unexpectedly if you don’t keep an eye on numbers.
- In order to ensure that they stay on the right side of spam legislation (and don’t have their other customers emails blocked) most impose restrictions on the methods by which you can add subscribers. Though uploading your existing subscriber-base should be no problem, many require that new subscribers are added using “double opt-in” and some specifically ban you from using emails from purchased marketing email lists.
- Your subscriber data (email name at minimum) needs to be stored on their servers, so you (or subscribers) may have concerns about privacy or data confidentiality. In practice this isn’t normally a real problem at all (all the specialist companies have tight security procedures) but there may be a perceived risk. And if you are using a company whose servers are not based in the UK, you may need to check (and possibly amend) your own organisations published privacy policy.
- You are not totally in control of the whole email delivery mechanism – which some organisation may not be comfortable with. Also subscribers may worry that their email address has been shared with others if they see a mention of another organisation at the end of your emails (like the Sign-Up.to one at the end of our newsletters) or when subscribing or unsubscribing. In practice, most internet users are well used to this concept and unworried by it, but if your subscriber base is more conservative or less “internet savvy” then you might need to give them extra reassurance.
Our view:
If you have thousands of subscribers, this probably the only practical solution unless you want to employ (or train to be) an email delivery specialist and your email servers really have the capacity to handle the huge volume of email.
If you have fewer subscribers, you need to balance the benefits against the costs. Make sure you take into account not only the time spent sending the emails, but the measured risk to your organisation if you did end up on a spam blacklist – and the time and effort to get off it, which after having to do this for other organisations ourselves we can vouch can be a painful and costly process and one which is best avoided!
Though we are IT specialists and a lot of our time is spent working with email delivery in some shape form (so we do have some level of expertise in this area), this is the solution we choose to use ourselves. Even though our mailing list is pretty tiny compared to some of the organisations we work with, we still find that outsourcing this part of our communication to an outside specialist organisation saves us time and money overall.
Keeping the Right Side of Spam Laws September 28, 2009
Posted by charitysolutions in Uncategorized.1 comment so far
Keeping the right side of spam laws is just as important for UK charities as it is for businesses and individuals. And any UK charity or NFP that sends out any type of bulk email (such as email newsletters, appeals, etc) needs to ensure that each bulk email doesn’t breach spam laws.
As well as the bad-feeling and potential loss of reputation and trust (and donations!) that comes with upsetting potential donors and supporters with unwanted emails, if the email was sent via your own organisations servers then there is a significant risk that all your organisations email can be blocked as your domain gets blacklisted.
A significant number of charities (or individuals working for charities) still don’t really understand spam laws or realise that they even apply to charities. In fact they not only apply to charity emails, but unless the charity or NFP is promoting commercial products (through a trading arm for example) then the organisation can not even take advantage of the “soft opt-in” relaxation of rules that commercial organisations can utilise.
And if any of your subscribers are overseas (such as the US) you also need to make sure that you don’t fall foul of the recipient countries spam laws either. This is particularly true of the USA and the CAN-SPAM laws there – and since many email servers used by UK residents are based in the US (Hotmail, GMail, Livemail etc) then you can find yourself blocked by US servers you never knew you were sending to!
Though strictly speaking spam laws apply to emails sent to individuals not companies, any email sent to a personal address for someone at that company (e.g bob.smith@company.co.uk rather than accounts@company.co.uk) is also deemed to be sent to an individual so is covered by spam laws too.
In order to keep on the right side of spam laws, here are six key things you need to make sure you do*:
- Explicitly get permission to send each person emails (opt-in). You can’t just assume they won’t mind or claim that they accepted because there was some small print on the back of something they filled in for you or because an out-of-date privacy policy on your website says that they are deemed to have accepted by doing something vaguely related at some point in the past. If you do ever get reported for spamming, you may well need to provide detailed information about your “opt-in” policy and evidence that the person making the complaint did opt in to your emails (and jump through a whole host of extra hoops) before your email domain can be removed from the blacklist.
- Provide a really clear (and working!) method for a recipient to opt-out of receiving email from you - in every bulk email you send to them. Thought you will still be legally covered if your opt-in link is buried somewhere more obscure in your emails, it is best to make it really obvious and really easy to follow.
These days it is incredibly easy for users to press a button in their email program to say that they think a message is spam – and if they do this in one of the online services like AOL or Hotmail then you can find your mails to all other users there have been incorrectly classified as spam too.
Basically you want to be sure that it is easier for a user to contact you to unsubscribe than to press the spam button!
- You must deal with any opt-out requests promptly (US laws give you 10 days, the UK is a little more generous!) and must continue to honour them and not send any more bulk emails to that person unless the specifically request you to do so at a later time.
- Make sure that you include who the email is from and contact details. For emails that may be deemed from a commercial organisation (such as a trading arm) and/or may go to the US and be covered by US laws you also need to include your postal address (and company registration number if applicable).
- Make sure that the title of the email accurately reflects what the email is about. Though this may not explicitly be law in the UK (it is in the US) doing this engenders greater trust from your readers and (again) stops them reaching for the spam button.
- Make sure whatever program you use to send your bulk emails keeps the privacy of recipients secure – you must be sure that one recipient can not get the emails of other recipients either directly from your email or by replying to it. In other words, make sure you don’t send to multiple recipients by putting all their names in the To or Cc field of an email and that any email distribution lists used are set to handle replies correctly.
Failure to do this breaches most Data Protection laws in addition to any Anti-Spam ones!
There is a lot more we could add here, but this blog entry runs the risk of turning into a book if we do. There are some links to further information below, but if you have any questions or would like more information on anything we have covered here, then please contact us or leave a comment – and if we can help or point you in the right direction (on the understanding that we do IT, we aren’t lawyers*) we will be more than happy to do so.
Further reading:
ICO – Data Protection Good Practice Note – Charities and Marketing (PDF document) – a short & easy to read document that outlines requirements with particular reference to charities
ICO – Data Protection Good Practice Note – Electronic Mail Marketing (PDF document) – also short & easy to read
ICO - Guidance for marketers on the Privacy and Electronic Communications (EC Directive) Regulations 2003
(PDF document) – much longer & contains much more detailed information but still pretty easy to read and full of useful information
Scotch Spam – Anti Spam Law - a site set up to try and stamp out spam by encouraging individuals to complain – the Spam Law page contains lots of information and links to key websites
FTC – The CAN-SPAM Act: A Compliance Guide for Business - US Federal Trade Commission site giving information about the US CAN-SPAM act – a little “wordy” in places but overall pretty clear & useful
Staying on the E-mail Up and Up: What Nonprofits Need to Know about CAN-SPAM – a short but useful guide specifically relating to non-profit organisations and the CAN-SPAM act with some good clear basic guidance
* Usual legal disclaimers apply - this information is provided as guidance only and is not a substitute for professional legal advice. We are not (and don’t claim to be) lawyers, so please consult your own legal representatives if you think it necessary.
Still time to enter our competition September 8, 2009
Posted by charitysolutions in charities, charity computers, General, Uncategorized.add a comment
If you work for a UK based charity or NFP then there is still time to enter our summer competition.
There are both silly and sensible prizes to be won, including 2 months of free telephone/remote support.
You don’t have to be an artistic or green-fingered genius to win so why not give it a go. Just visit:
http://www.charitysolutions.co.uk/summer.html
and fill in the form there or give us a ring or email your details to sales@charitysolutions.co.uk and we will take it from there.
Please do at least think about entering – and pass the message on to anyone you know who also works for a UK charity. While we don’t want to give current entry numbers away, let’s just say that the odds of winning are currently in your favour!
New Ways to Keep Up To Date May 25, 2008
Posted by charitysolutions in General, Uncategorized.2 comments
It is now much easier to keep updated with our blog.
If you look in the link area on the right of each page, you will see a whole set of new little links and icons to allow you to keep up to date via an RSS feed, Google Feed or Technorati.
Or if the the whole RSS thing doesn’t appeal, you can now get an email update every time we update the blog – just click on the Get an Email Update… link and follow the instructions. If you sign up using this service, Feedburner (who manage the updates for us) will send you an email in the afternoon (UK time) after we make an update with details of the new blog entry.
Hope you find the new services useful. If you need any help setting it up – or just getting to grips about what this whole RSS feed thing is about – just contact us (details on the About Charity Solutions page) or leave us a comment and we will do our best to help.



