How To Warmup SMTP Server (Free Warmup Tool Inside)

How To Warmup SMTP Server (Free Warmup Tool Inside)

How to Warmup SMTP Server
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Are your emails going to SPAM? Don’t worry, It's OK.
It is very common for emails to go land in the spam folder for a new sender with a new SMTP server (Email Server), new IP & Domain.
Even if all technical aspects such as SPFDKIMDMARCRDNSNo Blacklists, and 10/10 Score on Mail-Tester.com are in place, your emails may land in spam.
When you build a New SMTP Server with a new IP Address, or when you subscribe to an SMTP Service Like Amazon SES with a Dedicated IP, and before You can Start Sending any Email Marketing Campaigns, you have to warmup your IP Address.
Also, you need to warm it up if you left your IP without sending any email for more than 30 days or so.
So, SMTP warmup is somehow a continuous process.

What is Warming Up IP?

When you have a new Brand IP Address for your SMTP, this IP will have no Reputation on the internet, and ISPs (internet service providers) don't know this IP. So, IP warmup is the practice of building your reputation on the internet by gradually increasing the volume of emails sent with your IP address according to a predetermined schedule.

When an ISP notices an email suddenly coming from a new IP address, they will immediately begin evaluating the traffic coming from that IP.

Since ISPs treat email volume as a key in determining spam, it is best to start sending a low email volume, then increasing up your way up to more significant amounts.

This gives the email providers a chance to carefully observe and analyze your sending habits and volumes and record how your recipients engage with your email.

In general, Warming up takes between 2-10 Weeks according to your scenario and the number of emails you want to send per day.

How do ISPs evaluate your emails and Reputation?

When you start the warming up process, ISPs will Evaluate your Reputation according to three Main Factors:

  1. Bounce Rate: When you send an email campaign, you need to ensure that your emails are valid emails, High bounce rate will destroy your reputation.
  2. Spam Traps: Even a very low percentage of spam traps can blacklist you!
  3. Spammy Content: Your message content is essential. ISPs will check if you are using any spammy keywords or blacklisted links.
  4. User Interaction: How Recipients are interacting with your emails, if they are reporting you as spam, then this is a real problem!

Warming Up IP in Action (Examples)

Ok, now after we have the big picture warming up SMTP, let’s go with some examples and real scenarios and understand how the operation works:

Please note: These sample schedules are intended to be a suggestion only. Every sender is different.

1. 1000 Emails Per Day

This is not a big deal, you start by sending 14 emails the first day, then increase gradually to reach 1K in about 10-15 days. The schedule is described in the following table:

DayNo. Of EmailsIncrement Emails Per Day
1140
2195
3277
43710
55214
67220
710028
814039
919454
1027075
11375105
12521146
13725203
141000275

2. 10K Emails Per Day

Now, in this scenario, we do the same thing, but with a more extended schedule, check the following table:

DayNo. Of EmailsIncrement Emails Per Day
1130
2163
3204
4255
5326
6418
75110
86513
98216
1010321
1112926
1216333
1320542
1425953
1532667
1641084
17517106
18651133
19819168
201032212
211299267
221635336
232059423
242592533
253263671
264108845
2751721063
2865111339
2981971685
30100001803

3. 50K Emails Per Day

Now 50K per day is considered somehow a big number.

As a little advice, and to make things easier, always split large volume warmup campaigns into smaller ones, like in our case, we split it into three schedules:

  1. Reach 10K emails.
  2. Reach 30K emails.
  3. Reach 50K emails.

You may say, this will make the warmup schedule longer, maybe yes, but in our experience in this way, you can monitor and manage your warming-up campaigns easily and get better results.

So, if you were warming to 10K, the number of emails would be less, and you can see and monitor the user interaction and bounce rate on a smaller amount of emails, which will make the picture clearer.

I hope you got the point.

Free Warmup Tool

Warmup Schedule Generator

We always try our best to make things easy for everyone, especially for beginners, so we developed the Free Elitetools which also has a simple warmup schedule generator tool

Then, Select Your Email List Size, and Click Generate! And See the Magic

SMTP Server Warmup Schedule Generator Tool
Warmup Schedule Generator

Email Volume and Timeline

For IP warmup, the warmup schedule, and the sending volume is different for all senders.

The number of emails you send depends on your own total email volume, some may require to send 100 emails per day, and others may need 1M per day!

But in any case, you must send enough emails at enough frequency so that your email reputation can be tracked.

Also, you have to know something very important, most reputation systems only store data for 30 days, so you should not go 30 days or more without sending on an IP. If you do, then you will need to warm it up again. This is why we said above that warming up an IP is a continuous process.

Transaction VS Marketing Emails

Transactional Emails

If you want to use your SMTP server to send Transactional Emails (Password resets, invoices, welcome emails…). In this case, you may be an established business or a new business.

Established businesses:

If you are already sending a lot of emails, and you decide to move to an ESP for the first with dedicated IP or build your own SMTP, you should migrate you're sending a little bit at a time.

One way to do this is to split your traffic and move small portions of it to the new IP over time.

Alternatively, if you are already maintaining multiple mail servers, you can move your servers over to your new IP one at a time.

New businesses:

Typically, the organic growth of your business will, by its nature, create an ideal ramp. Since transactional email is usually dependent on the number of users you have, the growth in your customer base will create a nice, comfortable growth curve in your email volume. So you will not worry about warming up in this case.

But still, it's important to monitor your reputation and your system to see how it's performing. (We will talk about monitoring reputation later)

Email Marketing Campaigns

The Simplest Approach is to estimate your total monthly email volume and divide that number by 30.

Then, try to spread your sending evenly over the first 30 days, based on that calculation. For example: if you will send 90,000 emails/month, you should start off sending 3,000 per day over the first month and so on.

Maintain Warmup across ALL ISPs

It’s important to remember that you must maintain a steady volume during the entire warmup period for each ISP.

So remember to split up your warmup schedule so each ISP is receiving a comparable amount of mail each day – don’t warmup Gmail on Monday, Yahoo! on Tuesday, etc. – evenly disperse your mail to each ISP on each day of warmup.)

If not, your sending activity looks sporadic and you won’t be able to build a solid reputation.

Just mix things up! Don't send to one ISP at a time.

Warming up IP Tips:

There are some crucial tips that you have to Follow while warming up IP:

  1. Don’t ever start before you get a High sending score: Ensure this by configuring SPF, DKIM, rDNS, and other Technical Details.
  2. Don’t ever send promotional emails in the warmup period. You need the highest engagement rates, so send transactional emails or maybe some valuable info.
  3. Mail only to your top active subscribers first. Ensure almost 0% bounce rates.
  4. Don’t rotate or switch IPs during warmup. Rotation is a sign of spam.
  5. In your emails, add a clear link for people to unsubscribe.
  6. Add an Email Signature that makes your emails look trusted.
  7. Mix your campaigns with premium SMTP services – this will give better user interaction and domain reputation.
  8. Join Newsletters. This will make a lot of emails come to your inbox and give you a Higher domain reputation.
  9. Send to your friend’s list and ask them to report you as non-spam and tell them to reply.
  10. Try your best to build an audience and warmup to that audience. In this way, you will achieve the best user interaction and will make the “warming up process” a lot easier.
  11. Monitor your campaigns accurately, and be sure to keep your bounce rate below 2% by validating your emails (You can use our service to validate the emails – Bulk Email Verification)

How to Monitor IP Reputation?

So, you need to monitor your Bounce rate, user feedback, and reputation score.

Some Services Like Amazon SES, and Sparkpost has a built-in reputation system that shows your Bounce Rate and User Interaction.

If you are using a Custom SMTP as we explained in How To Set Up SMTP Server With Postal (Step By Step Guide) or whatever SMTP you are using.

In some cases, you will be able to monitor bounces and user feedback through the mailing system like in MailWizz. You can also monitor open, unsubscribe, and open rates. This will give you an indication of how users are interacting with your messages.

Monitor Reputation?

Having the right tools for checking the IP reputation is halfway to success. Here are some tools and
services you can use:

  • senderscore.org by Return Path. The score ranks from 0 to 100, 100 being the best. It tells you how you're performing. Typically it's recommended that you maintain your sender score of 90 or better.
  • talosintelligence.com by Cisco. It tells you how your reputation is across all the network providers Cisco manages. The reputation score is grouped into Good, Neutral, and Poor.
  • postmaster.live.com Microsoft's Smart Network Data Services gives you information about the traffic originating from your IP address such as the volume of sent emails, complaint rates, and spam trap
    hits.
  • postmaster.google.com Gives access to your domain's data on Google Search Console.
  • postmaster.aol.com Check your IP reputation and rates it as “bad”, “neutral”, and “good”.

Conclusion:

IP warmup is the act of sending emails gradually to build a good reputation and reach the recipient’s inbox. So, be careful, and follow the guidelines and tips listed above, to achieve the best results.

Good Luck, if you have questions or clarifications, you can comment below, or open a question on Sapnaaz Forum.

Hope You All The Best!


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