DMARC Compliance Changes for 2024 - GMAIL/OUTLOOK Bulk Sending

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I found fascinating information on the new DMARC compliance changes in February 2024 that affect GMAIL/YAHOO bulk sending. You’ve probably seen other marketers chatting online about these authentication rules that will take place beginning in February. Many people use Gmail or Yahoo to send emails to their customers, and if you have been doing that, too, these rule changes will affect you.

This new rule was announced in October of 2023 when both Google and Yahoo changed their bulk sender guidelines. It looks like we who aren’t in compliance are going to have a hard time with deliverability in getting their emails to inboxes.

Let’s discuss why this is happening and what you can do about it. Don’t panic, but don’t procrastinate, either. Email marketing is one of the most effective ways to reach your target audience, and it’s an aspect of your business you must maintain pristinely. I’m a newbie in this aspect, but I read and research a lot. Probably too much, lol.

Here are some answers I have gathered to help us here at Wealthy Affiliate. I did a search on DMARC changes on WA and didn’t find much, except for a post about problems with Aweber by a WA user, so maybe I can get a leg up on this issue for us.

Why Is This Happening Now?

Spam has always been a problem, and at every turn, major companies have worked hard to ensure spammers are prohibited from cluttering your inbox. One main reason they do this is because if the user is annoyed, they may switch to an option that prevents spam even better.

Google and Yahoo decided that anyone sending bulk email (which means 5,000 or more emails per day) and other volumes to Gmail accounts would need to be authenticated.

I’m not even close to sending bulk emails yet. I wish I had that many sign-ups, so this doesn’t affect me yet. I’m going to apply these changes anyway for the future.

They’re doing this change to prevent unwanted emails and malicious mailings such as spoofing or phishing emails that are fraudulent and aim to scam people, not just spam them.

Everyone should welcome these changes because it means your brand will also occasionally receive a level of protection against anyone impersonating you. This happens from time to time, and it’s a way to sabotage your reputation or trick customers without your knowledge.

What Are the New Sender Guidelines for Email Marketers?

Google and Yahoo want you to have an authenticated outgoing email account. This technical part overwhelms many people, but it doesn’t have to be complicated. There are other guidelines as well.

They don’t want you to send out unwanted or unsolicited emails to individuals. Cold emailing (typically B2B, not B2C) will be largely unaffected by these changes, but they still have their spam guidelines to adhere to.

They also require you to make it easy for people to unsubscribe from your emails. This annoys consumers when you’re not only receiving spam but there’s no way to get off the person’s list.

If you don’t work to follow these guidelines, Gmail is going to block your messages and mark them as spam or limit your send rate. Starting February 1st, 2024, you’ll want to follow the guidelines for the under 5,000 and over 5,000 email messages from your business.

You have to set up SPF or DKIM to authenticate your domain. Many marketers have simply been sending from a Gmail account, and now you will want to register a domain and authenticate it so that the email comes from something like yourname@yourdomain.com.

To set up SPF, which willany prevent people from impersonating your domain, you’ll publish an SPF record on your domain. This will list any and all email senders for your domain.

Whenever an email is sent, the receiving email server checks the record to see if the incoming email is verified to send emails on your behalf. You can follow the SPF Set Up Instructions with example records here.

Each domain provider may have different steps to set up the field names for the DNS TXT record. But Google has some guidelines and instructions on how to add your SPF record at your domain provider.

The domain must have valid forward and reverse DNS records (PTR records). This verifies that the sending host is associated with the IP address attached to it. You’ll need to set up valid reverse DNS records and if you want to check for a PTR record, you can do that in the Google Admin Toolbox Dig tool.

If you’re using a shared IP address, then anyone sharing that IP address will impact your mailer reputation. If they have engaged in shady behavior (or do so in the future), your emails will get blocked along with them.

You can use Postmaster Tools to monitor the reputation of anyone sharing your IP if you happen to be using an email service provider for the shared IP. You also have to send emails that support one-click unsubscribe.

That means they aren’t taken to a page where they have to go through additional unsubscribe steps, but they can click one link in your email, and it’s done – they’re unsubscribed from that point on.

The formatting of your emails is also going to matter. They have standards such as the Internet Format Standard and HTML Standards. If you include links in the email, they have to be clear and visible and not anything that’s going to trick people into going to a link they weren’t aware they were going to.to increase the volume of emails you’re sending out gradually

If you’re new to email marketing, you should know that you need to increase the volume of emails you’re sending out gradually. It’s a red flag if you go from 15 emails to 60,000 overnight – it means you likely bought a list of unsuspecting subscribers.

Consistency also matters. You don’t want to go cold from your list and then suddenly spam them with a huge burst of emails in a short period. Monitoring your results will help determine if your list responds positively to your schedule.

DMARC and DKIM Options

This is where most marketers are worrying. DKIM (DomainKeys Identified Mail) is not identical to SPF (Sender Policy Framework), which we discussed previously.

With DKIM, the recipient is verifying that the message hasn’t been altered in transit, while SPF is verifying that the incoming email is attached to the authorized domain. DMARC, on the other hand, adds another layer of protection to the process.

DKIM stands for Domain-based Message Authentication Reporting and Conformance. It’s going to verify senders by using DKIM or SPF to more deeply analyze the verification status on incoming emails.

Consider it similar to a tailored approach that gives senders more control over their own authentication process. You can instruct servers receiving the emails on what to do with emails that don’t pass the DMARC test.

This helps you prevent your brand from being spoofed. The DMARC test will check for any hidden pathways in the return email and ensure it matches the domain it claims to be from.

If, for any reason, there’s a glitch and it doesn’t pass DKIM or SPF, then DMARC can be set up by you to tell the receiving server what to do with it. You can choose “none,” which means the email can still be delivered, put in the spam box or filtered out.

Or, you can choose to “quarantine” the emails, which means it goes to spam. Or, you can have it outright “reject” the email, meaning it never gets delivered. You can even tailor it so that the server does a partial “none” and partial “reject” with a certain percentage if you want to.

You’ll get reports from receiving servers for every failed DMARC that comes through, helping you put more preventative measures in place. With DMARC you can add a variety of additional tags, like pct (the percentage we mentioned just now), sp (allowing you to instruct it to ignore failures from the main domain, but quarantine subdomains), and more.

To set up DMARC, you have to generate a record first and then add it to your domain’s DNS files. There are DMARC Record Creation tools you can use. Each provider will have their method of adding the record to your DNS, so you’ll need to look that up depending on your domain and hosting.

After setting it up, you’ll start getting reports within a day so you can begin monitoring the health of your email compliance efforts. You can also add a BIMI brand logo to your DMARC, which will be verified with Verified Mark Certifications (giving your subscribers proof that it’s from you).

Instead of seeing this as a pain, look at it as a welcomed layer of protection that will not only give your subscribers a decluttered inbox so your emails stand out, but give you more protection for your brand reputation!

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Recent Comments

15

Glad you beat me to posting this, Teri! I'd already asked Kyle on my 2nd day about DMARC (the easy one to remember with a brother named Mark). What a lot to comply with; saw a vlog on YouTube in December, but without my sites up, no worries. Great idea to be compliant earlier than later if you should have a niche blow up your business past 5,000! (Hope it's Soon!) J=jill

Glad it helped, Jill! 😊😍😎🥰

Thanks, Teri!

Hey Teri, great post. We've got you covered here at WA :)

Before I posted this, I did a search on DMARC on WA and didn't find anything on the subject except a few related posts or questions. Hmmm....

Teri

Great info! Although I'm no where near this yet! HaHa! But good to know! Thanks!
Jena

Thanks, Jena. I'm also nowhere near this, but we have hopes!

I have noticed lots of spam too, Teri! It seems to be very prevalent on my phone! Thanks for the important share!

Jeff

😉😘🥰😎

😎👍👍

Good to learn about, Teri. Thanks for sharing!

Susan

😎🥰😘😉

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Create Your Free Wealthy Affiliate Account Today!
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4-Steps to Success Class
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Market Research & Analysis Tools
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