HTML Email Design & Coding
HTML Email Design & Coding

Anti Spam Policy

At Web Dandy, we take permission very seriously. Before we can work with you on your email campaign, you must agree to our anti-spam policy.

Our definition of spam 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.

What Does and Doesn't Constitute Permission?

What kind of email addresses are OK to send to?

To send email to anyone, you must have clearly obtained their permission. This could be done through:

  1. An email newsletter subscribe form on your web site.
  2. 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.
  3. 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.
  4. Customers who have purchased from you within the last 2 years.
  5. If someone gives you their business card and you have explained to them that you will be in touch by email, 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.

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 Addresses are Not OK to Send To?

Anything outside the examples above doesn't equal permission in our eyes, but here are some examples to make sure we're crystal clear. You agree not send to any email address which:

  1. You do not have explicit, provable permission to contact in relation to the topic of the email you're sending.
  2. 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.
  3. You haven't contacted via email in the last 2 years.
  4. You scraped or copied and pasted from the web. Just because people publish their email address doesn't mean they want to hear from you.

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 Be Included in My Emails?

Every 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. We will add this for you.
  • The name and physical address of the sender.

How We'll Know If You Don't Have Permission

  • 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 they press the button. 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.
  • We monitor blacklists and our abuse accounts every day. We can pinpoint who is causing delivery problems or attracting complaints very easily. If we do discover that you're emailing people without their permission, we'll terminate your account 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.