Google and Yahoo’s new email authentication and unsubscribe rules impact bulk senders. Learn how to comply with and avoid spam filters.
On Feb. 1, 2024, Google and Yahoo started enforcing new requirements for bulk email senders. The guidelines largely focus on the authentication of outgoing emails, reported spam rates, and the ability to easily unsubscribe from email lists.
In an early October 2023 announcement, Google defined bulk senders as “those who send more than 5,000 messages to Gmail addresses in one day,” which caught the attention of email marketers in both B2B and B2C circles.
According to Google, bulk senders that fail to meet the sender requirements will receive temporary errors (with error codes) on a small percentage of their non-compliant email traffic. These temporary errors will help senders identify email traffic that doesn’t meet the new guidelines and allow senders to resolve issues leading to non-compliance.
Email rejections began in April 2024. According to Google:
In April 2024, we’ll start rejecting a percentage of non-compliant email traffic, and we’ll gradually increase the rejection rate. For example, if 75% of a sender’s traffic meets our requirements, we’ll start rejecting a percentage of the remaining 25% of traffic that isn’t compliant.
What are the email authentication requirements for bulk senders?
The two companies require bulk email senders to use what Google calls “well-established best practices” to authenticate the sender. This will close loopholes that can be exploited by attackers, according to Google.
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When it comes to email authentication, three mechanisms work together:
- Sender Policy Framework (SPF) helps prevent domain spoofing by allowing senders to identify the email servers allowed to send emails from their domain.
- DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) adds a digital signature to outgoing emails, verifying that an authorized sender sent the message and wasn’t tampered with.
- Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting, and Conformance (DMARC) helps domain owners specify which actions to take when an email fails authentication and enables reporting on email authentication results.
Google and Yahoo now require bulk senders to set up all three mechanisms.
What are the reported spam rates for bulk email senders?
Google says bulk senders must keep their reported spam rate (i.e., the percentage of outgoing messages reported as spam by recipients) in Google Postmaster Tools below 0.10% and “avoid ever reaching 0.30% or higher.”
Reporting an email as spam is relatively easy, which sets this requirement apart from authentication and unsubscribe links. It comes down to the value the receiver thinks they get. To some extent, it’s out of the sender’s hands.
Dana Carr, director of email marketing for customer data platform vendor Optimove, recommends several strategies to avoid having legitimate messages flagged as spam. First, pay attention to send times. Many bulk emails are sent at the top or bottom of the hour, making it easy for people to report them as spam.
She also suggests using preference centers, which let users dictate the frequency of emails and the categories and products included in the messages. Carr said preference centers reduce email volume and often increase engagement with emails.
What are the ‘unsubscribe’ requirements for bulk senders?
Unsurprisingly, Google requires marketing and other subscribed messages to support one-click unsubscribe functions.
Carr said this should already be a table stakes for experienced email marketers. Any lingering reluctance to include the feature indicates an email strategy focused on quantity over quality.
“The number of people receiving your emails is one number in a group of numbers that can hurt your reputation. That includes not only list size but open rates,“ Carr said. “At the end of the day, all of these numbers are hurting your engagement metrics. Instead of considering list size, we need to consider segmentation and targeted content.”
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How concerned should email marketers be about these requirements?
Most experienced email marketers will review these requirements and say, “Check. Check. Check.”
Carr believes senders who understand authentication and good email practices shouldn’t be overly concerned. But there’s a catch.
The requirements apply at the domain level, meaning they apply to all emails the organization sends using the domain, not just marketing. That includes sales teams, particularly business and sales development representatives, who rely heavily on outbound cold email tactics.
Armed with generative AI tools and sales engagement platforms (e.g., Salesloft and Outreach), these teams can generate a high volume of emails.
These roles don’t always report to marketing, either, and likely aren’t familiar with email authentication requirements. That sets up a turf battle for marketers trying to protect their email strategy.
“It is generally marketing that controls the authentication,” said Ryan Phelan, CEO and co-founder of digital marketing services company RPEOrigin.com and a MarTech contributor. “A good partnership between sales and marketing is critical.”
Carr also thinks marketing should lead on authentication and good email practices throughout the organization. “Marketing should be aware of the sending domain for messages,” she said. “Some people will get this confused with the website domain.”
Carr said marketing should also advise the authentication team because any change at the DNS level could cause a serious problem.
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Why are there new requirements for bulk senders?
Spam is a significant problem. Most people don’t realize the breadth of the issue because most spam messages are blocked before they reach the inbox. Spam is also a security threat, and when it reaches the inboxes of users in certain corporations or government agencies, it’s potentially a very serious security threat.
But ridding the world of spam is only part of the motivation here.
“The inbox is a revenue source,” said Phelan. “The ads at the top of the inbox. The ads in the mobile app. It’s a hook into the data mart for Google.”
For years, Google has taken steps to protect its revenue source, including adding tabs to sort out promotional and social emails in Gmail. Phelan believes the latest moves are another way to address the problem. The natural reaction, he said, is to filter out the noise by using tactics like authentication to help decide who reaches the inbox.
Carr agrees that the move has much to do with keeping the inbox central to people’s daily activities. “[Google is] not foolish,” she said. “They know more and more customers are choosing other channels, including SMS and in-app messaging. This is like parents saying, ‘I gave you three chances.’”
Study finds B2B firms aren’t prepared for bulk email restrictions
Companies in the B2B sector, where outbound email is an important part of the sales strategy, must learn to live with these bulk email restrictions.
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A report from Customers.ai, which sells tools to help businesses better identify their website visitors, suggests that many B2B sectors are experiencing reported spam rates far above the 0.1% suggested by Google and Yahoo, surpassing the 0.3% threshold that senders should never reach.
The average spam complaint rate across the B2B space was 2.01%, between 1.1% and 3.1%.
In fact, for the nine spammiest verticals identified by Customers.ai, the company could not find a single sender that could score below the 0.3% threshold. Learn more about the Customers.ai study and its methodology on the company’s blog.
What about Google Workspace inboxes?
But there’s good news for B2B bulk email senders. There’s an exemption if they’re sending to business email accounts running on Google.
Google Workspace inboxes are email accounts managed by businesses or educational institutions on Google servers. While initially unclear whether the bulk email restrictions would apply to Google Workspace accounts, Google eventually confirmed they did not.
The Email sender guidelines don’t apply to messages sent to Google Workspace accounts. Sender requirements and Google enforcement apply only when sending email to personal Gmail accounts.
A multichannel approach will help protect your email
Outbound sales teams in the B2B sector are getting much attention around the new bulk email restrictions. Unlike marketing, cold sales outreach in B2B relies mainly on two channels: email and phone calls.
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“On the B2B side, this all traces back to the money,” said Phelan. “Cold email has become so prevalent in the toolbox, everyone is using it.”
While marketers in some organizations might prefer that sales teams dial down their email outreach, it’s easier than ever to send a high volume of cold emails.
Phelan prefers marketers to lead outreach with account-based marketing (ABM) campaigns. A multichannel approach to ABM will expose prospects to messages in display ads and on social media, for example, in addition to email. What is the downside of the ABM approach? It takes a lot more work to plan and build than email.
Natalie Jackson is Director of Demand Generation at CBIZ, co-host of the podcast Humans of Email and a MarTech contributor. She agrees that a multichannel approach will not only keep marketing organizations from running afoul of new bulk sender restrictions, but will also deliver more insights about marketing channels and revenue streams. That includes putting marketing in a position to see how sales outreach compares to other channels.
“These changes are 100% an opportunity for marketers to have a bigger hand in the customer journey and prospect experience,” Jackson said. “Email can’t live in a silo. You see this in email engagement reports. If you only look at a sent email report, you’re missing the bigger picture of what interactions influence recipient behavior. What’s the impact of one-to-one interactions? Sales engagement tools? Social media? Website? Advertising?”
A holistic view of outreach and results will allow marketers to protect their email domains and better judge the performance of different channels and tactics.
“If we, as marketers, don’t have insight into these interactions, we’re limiting our ability to influence revenue streams,” Jackson said. “We need visibility into other sending systems for reasons beyond deliverability.”
Microsoft Exchange Online introduces an External Recipient Rate limit
Microsoft announced in April 2024 that it would begin enforcing an External Recipient Rate (ERR) limit of 2,000 recipients in 24 hours in January 2025.
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According to Microsoft, the goal of the ERR is to reduce abuse and unfair usage of Exchange Online resources. Exchange Online was not designed to support bulk or high-volume transactional email, but Microsoft has not enforced limits on bulk email until now.
Currently, Exchange Online enforces a Recipient Rate limit of 10,000 recipients. The new 2,000-message ERR limit will become a sub-limit within the 10,000 Recipient Rate limit. Users who send to less than 2,000 external recipients in a 24-hour period can still send to 10,000 total recipients.
The new ERR limit will be introduced in two phases:
- Phase 1: Starting Jan. 1, 2025, the limit will apply to cloud-hosted mailboxes of all newly created tenants.
- Phase 2: Between July and December 2025, Microsoft will start applying the limit to cloud-hosted mailboxes of existing tenants.
Microsoft advises users with bulk email needs for cloud-hosted mailboxes to switch from Exchange Online to Azure Communications Services for Email.
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Yahoo introduces new, improved Sender Hub Dashboard
Yahoo introduced a new Sender Hub Dashboard in May of 2024 to give email senders more visibility into their email activity.
Email senders can use the new hub to enroll in Complaint Feedback Loop (CFL) management. Enrolled senders will receive a report when recipients mark their emails as spam, allowing them to optimize their target audience and email frequency.
The Sender Hub Dashboard also features information on AMP, Email Structured Data, and Schema and Brand Indicators for Message Identification (BIMI). Email senders can also use the Hub to access deliverability information, including Yahoo sender requirements and recommendations on sending emails to Yahoo users and error code explanations for senders who encounter issues or SMTP errors.