Mail Reputation Management
There is a reason many like to use ESPs - Email Service Providers. Just setting up a good mail server is an arduous task, and generally pretty thankless. And at the end of that long, headache-filled road, your job is only beginning. It is one thing to be able to receive mail with minimal spammy fuss, it is quite another to be able to send it. Especially if you are a large community and your membership has you sending several thousand mails per day - or more.
The following is a basic checklist to help your mailserver maintain a positive reputation.
Check Blacklists
IP addresses have been moving around long before IANA handed out their final five /8 blocks. Often you will end up on one block or another that was once part of a smaller ISP whose address range was listed as dynamic, or a similar situation.
So don't be surprised if you're on a blocklist the moment you've got your IP. It happens - go through the removal process and get it taken care of.
Sign up for the DNS Whitelist
- DNS Whitelist – Protect against false positives - This is the major one. At least one blacklist automatically checks this to make sure you're not on it.
Sign up for feedback loops
The big ones:
- Hotmail's Junk Mail Reporting Program
- Yahoo Complaint Feedback Loop - as annoying as Yahoo is, I find the fact that they use DKIM and track by mailing domain makes dealing with these much easier.
- AOL Postmaster - Feedback Loop - Not many AoL addresses in my line of websites, but your mileage may vary. There are still a lot of people using them.