At Primary Target Email, we take
permission very seriously. By creating an account
and agreeing to our Terms
of Use, you are also agreeing to this anti-spam
policy.
The law isn’t enough, it’s
permission that counts
While the CAN-SPAM
laws are a step in the right direction for
reducing the spam problem, we don’t feel
they go far enough. Our definition of spam goes
beyond the laws in most countries and encompasses
what we believe to be true permission email marketing.
Spam is any email
you send to someone who hasn’t given
you their direct permission to contact them
on the topic of the email.
But that’s not enough. Permission is a fuzzy
word open to interpretation. Let’s get into
some specific scenarios so it’s clear what
does and doesn’t constitute permission.
What kind of email addresses are OK to send to
with Primary Target Email?
To send email to anyone using Primary Target Email,
you must have clearly obtained their permission.
This could be done through:
- An email newsletter subscribe form on
your web site.
- An opt-in checkbox on a form. This checkbox
must not be checked by default, the person completing
the form must willingly select the
checkbox to indicate they want to hear from you.
- If someone completes an offline form like
a survey or enters a competition, you can only
contact them if it was explained to them that
they would be contacted by email AND they ticked
a box indicating they would like to be contacted.
- Customers who have purchased from you within
the last 2 years.
- If someone gives you their business
card and you have explicitly asked
for permission to add them to your list, you
can contact them. If they dropped their business
card in a fishbowl at a trade show, there must
be a sign indicating they will be contacted
by email about that specific topic.
Basically, you can only
ever email anyone who has clearly given you permission
to email them specifically about the subject
you’re contacting
them about.
What kind of email address ARE NOT OK to send
to with Primary Target Email?
Anything outside the examples
above doesn’t
equal permission in our eyes, but here are some
examples to make sure we’re crystal clear.
By using Primary Target Email, you agree not to import
or send to any email address which:
- You do not have explicit, provable
permission to contact in relation
to the topic of the email you’re sending.
- You bought, loaned, rented or in any way acquired from
a third party, no matter what they
claim about quality or permission. You need
to obtain permission yourself.
- You haven’t
contacted via email in the last 2 years.
Permission doesn’t
age well and these people have either changed
email address or won’t remember giving
their permission in the first place.
- You scraped or copy and pasted from
the web. Just because people publish their email
address doesn’t mean they want to hear
from you.
Sure, some of these people
might have given you their email address, but
what’s missing is
your permission to email them commercial messages.
Blasting promotional emails to any of these people
won’t be effective and will more than likely
see your email marked as spam by many of your recipients.
What content MUST I include in my email?
Every email you send using Primary Target Email must
include the following:
- A single-click unsubscribe link that
instantly removes the subscriber from your list.
Once they unsubscribe, you can never email them
again.
- The name and physical address of the
sender. If you’re sending an
email for your client, you’ll need to
include your client’s details instead.
How we’ll know if you don’t
have permission
Primary Target Email has numerous
layers of approval and monitoring to ensure you
comply with our anti-spam policy. Here’s
a few of them:
- Until your account has been approved by a member
of our team, every email you send will
need to be approved.
- Our software is directly integrated into the spam
reporting systems for some of the
biggest ISP’s like Hotmail and AOL. If
you don’t have permission and someone
marks your campaign as spam, we’ll know
about it the moment that button is pressed.
If you receive a complaint rate greater than
0.25% of all recipients (that’s 25 complaints
for every 10,000 recipients) your account will
be terminated. This is a generous figure that
takes into account false spam reports.
- Our team verifies all large lists imported
into our software. Until we’ve given it
the all clear, you can’t send to it.
- We monitor blacklists and our abuse
accounts all day every day. We can
pinpoint who is causing us delivery problems
or attracting complaints very easily.
If we do discover that
you’re emailing people
without their permission, we will terminate your
account with Primary Target Email immediately.
In the end, it’s really common sense. Take
off your marketing hat and put yourself in your
recipient’s shoes. If they don’t recognize
who you are or aren’t interested in what
you’re sending, they’ll think you’re
a spammer. It’s that simple.
If you have any questions about
our Anti-Spam Policy, or if you want to report
spamming activity by one of our customers, please
contact
us. |