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The boring email hygiene routine that fixed our deliverability

How to use Maxprog products Maxprog's Blog

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The boring email hygiene routine that fixed our deliverability

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Why I am writing about email (and not personal finance) today


  • In mid 2026, email deliverability is the small-business problem that keeps repeating - not because email is dead, but because inbox providers are stricter and more automated than ever.

  • I keep seeing the same pattern: good businesses send decent content, but a quietly messy list drags everything down.

  • This post is the routine we settled on after a couple of painful months: fewer bounces, fewer spam-folder surprises, and more stable results.


The pain point: nothing is "wrong" - yet results keep sliding


  • Open rates drift down, but content quality did not change.

  • Replies slow down, even from customers who used to respond.

  • You run a promo and it performs fine one month, then falls flat the next.

  • You look for a fancy fix: new subject lines, more personalization, different sending days.


  • The unglamorous truth: inbox providers treat list quality like a signal of whether you are a responsible sender.

  • If you keep mailing dead addresses, role accounts, and typo domains, you train the system to expect bounces and complaints.

  • And once that reputation slips, every future campaign starts from a worse position.


The lesson we learned the hard way


  • We assumed "small list" meant "safe." We were wrong.

  • A list of 3,000 can be riskier than 30,000 if it is old, imported from multiple places, and never cleaned.

  • We also assumed unsubscribes were the main metric. They matter, but bounces and silent non-engagement matter just as much - sometimes more.

  • If you want predictable email performance, treat list hygiene like bookkeeping: regular, boring, and non-negotiable.



The workflow we use: simple, repeatable, and measurable


  • This is not a one-time cleanup. It is a loop.

  • We run it monthly, plus a mini version after every large import (trade show list, partner referral list, old CRM export).

  • The goal is not perfection. The goal is to keep "bad signals" from piling up.


Step 1 - Control how addresses enter your world


  • We stopped accepting "email lists" as a single spreadsheet that floats around. Every source gets tagged.

  • We keep a simple intake note: where it came from, when, and what consent means in practice.

  • Why it works: when a campaign goes sideways, you can trace the damage to a source instead of blaming your whole program.


  • Concrete example: we had a "customer list" that included receipts forwarded by an office manager. Many were temporary or mistyped addresses. That one segment caused most of our bounces.


Step 2 - Normalize and deduplicate before you do anything else


  • Before validation, we normalize:

  • Lowercase everything.

  • Trim spaces.

  • Split combined fields like "Name <[email protected]>" into separate columns.

  • Deduplicate on email address, not on name.


  • Why it works: verification and bounce handling are less useful if you keep multiple versions of the same contact. Also, duplicates are an easy way to annoy people and trigger complaints.


Step 3 - Verify addresses before sending (especially after imports)


  • We use eMail Verifier for list checks before a new segment gets mailed.

  • We do not treat verification as "permission." It is only a technical check: does the mailbox look deliverable?

  • Why it works: it prevents avoidable hard bounces, which are among the fastest ways to harm sender reputation.


  • What we do with results:

  • Invalid - remove immediately.

  • Unknown - keep out of the main list and test cautiously, or request a fresh address from the customer.

  • Role accounts (info@, sales@, support@) - we usually exclude unless the business relationship clearly expects it.

Example decision rule we use
(if you need something concrete):

If status = Invalid -> Suppress
If status = Unknown -> Hold for manual review
If role account -> Suppress unless explicitly opted in
If status = OK -> Eligible to mail




Step 4 - Send in a way that protects reputation


  • This is where people jump straight to templates and subject lines. We focused on risk management first.

  • We send to engaged contacts first, then expand.

  • Why it works: engagement acts like a positive signal and can buffer you when you mail less-engaged segments.


  • We use MaxBulk Mailer for campaigns where we want tight control over sending, segmentation, and content versions on a desktop workflow.

  • We keep segments simple:

  • Recent customers (last 12 months).

  • Older customers (12-36 months).

  • Leads who asked for quotes.

  • Newsletter signups who never bought.


  • Why segmentation works (in plain terms): you stop forcing one message to do all jobs. A quieter message to older customers can outperform a louder promo that feels irrelevant.


Step 5 - Process bounces every time, not "when we get to it"


  • This was the step we used to skip. It was the step that mattered most.

  • We now process bounces after every campaign, usually the next morning.

  • We use eMail Bounce Handler to parse bounce messages and classify them.


  • Why it works: bounces are feedback. If you keep mailing hard bounces, you are telling mailbox providers you do not maintain your list.


  • Our handling rules:

  • Hard bounce (user does not exist, domain does not exist) - suppress immediately.

  • Soft bounce (mailbox full, temporary failure) - allow 2-3 attempts over time, then suppress if it repeats.

  • Spam complaint - suppress immediately and review what was sent and to whom.

A small-business-friendly cadence

Day 0: Send campaign
Day 1: Process bounces, suppress hard bounces
Day 7: Recheck repeat soft bounces
Day 30: Monthly hygiene run (verify + dedupe + segment review)




Step 6 - Use a suppression list like a seatbelt


  • We maintain a suppression list that includes:

  • Unsubscribes.

  • Hard bounces.

  • Repeat soft bounces.

  • Addresses that asked to be removed (even if they never used the unsubscribe link).


  • Why it works: people accidentally re-import old contacts all the time. A suppression list prevents that one mistake from becoming a deliverability incident.


Step 7 - Keep acquisition honest (and boring)


  • We stopped using "add everyone you met" behavior.

  • Instead, we send a one-time follow-up to new contacts and ask them to confirm what they want.

  • Why it works: the first email sets expectations. Clear expectations reduce complaints and improve engagement.


  • If someone does not engage after that first follow-up, we do not keep poking them forever. We would rather have a smaller list that performs than a bigger list that harms us.


What changed for us (and what did not)


  • What improved:

  • Fewer hard bounces within two sends.

  • More stable inbox placement - fewer "I did not get it" messages from regular customers.

  • Less time spent guessing whether content or deliverability was the problem.


  • What did not magically improve:

  • If the offer is weak, hygiene will not save it.

  • If you email people who did not ask for it, verification will not protect you from complaints.

  • If you change your sending behavior wildly (huge spikes, long gaps), you still create risk.


A quick note on list building tools and scraping


  • You can extract addresses from sources in a lot of ways. If you use eMail Extractor, treat it as a research and data-entry helper, not a license to spam.

  • Why I am cautious here: unsolicited mail is where small businesses get into trouble fastest - legally, reputationally, and operationally.

  • The practical middle ground we use: only mail people when we can explain (to them) why they are receiving the email and how to stop it.


The metrics we actually watch


  • Hard bounce rate - should be very low. If it spikes, stop and investigate the source segment.

  • Spam complaints - even a small number is serious for a small list.

  • Reply rate (for relationship emails) - tells you if you are sending something humans want to respond to.

  • Click-to-open rate (when links exist) - more useful than raw opens in 2026.


  • Why these work: they connect to sender reputation and actual business outcomes, not vanity stats.


Common mistakes I would avoid if I were starting again


  • Mailing an old list "just once" - that is often all it takes to cause a reputation dip.

  • Ignoring soft bounces forever - repeated temporary failures are still a bad signal.

  • Treating verification as consent - it is not.

  • Over-segmenting too early - 4-6 segments you can maintain beats 25 segments you cannot.


Where to learn more (one link)



Checklist


  • Tag every list source with date and consent context

  • Normalize and deduplicate emails before importing anywhere

  • Verify new imports and quarantine "unknown" results

  • Send to engaged contacts first, then expand carefully

  • Process bounces after every campaign and suppress hard bounces

  • Maintain a suppression list and always apply it on imports

  • Review metrics monthly, not only when something breaks


3 Actionable Takeaways


  • Run a bounce-processing step the morning after every send - do not wait for a quarterly cleanup.

  • Quarantine any list you did not personally watch being collected, and verify it before it touches your main audience.

  • Keep your segmentation simple enough that you will still be doing it six months from now.

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