Email Marketing Glossary of
Terms
Above the fold: Describes
the part of an email message or web page that is visible without
scrolling down the page. This term is important because all
content above the fold is assumed to be more valuable to the reader
as they see it first. The size of the "above the fold" area
will depend on the resolution of the users computer monitor and the
number of pixels their monitor displays.
Acquisition cost: In email
marketing, the cost to generate a lead, newsletter subscriber or
sale in an email marketing campaign; typically, the total campaign
expense divided by the number of leads, subscribers or customers it
produced.
Ad Exchange: An exchange
between two publishers in which each agrees to run the other's
comparably valued ad at no charge. Value is determined by rate card,
placement, size of list, quality of list, name brand fame, etc.
Affiliate: A marketing
partner that promotes your products or services under a
pay-per-sale, pay-per-lead, or pay-per-click commission.
Alert: Email message that
notifies subscribers of an event or special promotion.
AOL: America Online.
Application Program Interface
(API): How a program (application) accesses another to transmit
data. A client may have an API connection to load database
information to an email vendor automatically and receive data back
from the email.
Application Service Provider
(ASP): Company that provides a Web-based service. Clients don’t
have to install software on their own computers; all tasks are
performed on (hosted on) the ASP’s servers.
Attachment: A text, video,
graphic, PDF, music file or any other file that accompanies an email
message but is not included in the message itself. Attachments are
not a good way to send email newsletters because many ISPs, email
clients and individual email recipients do not allow attachments or
the file could be perceived as a virus.
Authentication: An automated
process that verifies an email sender's identity.
Auto-responder: Automated
email message-sending capability, such as a welcome message sent to
all new subscribers when they join a list. May be triggered by
subscribes, unsubscribes, clicking a specific link in an email, or
when opening an email message.
Bayesian filter: An
anti-spam program that evaluates header and content of incoming
email messages to determine the probability that it is spam.
Bayesian filters assign point values to items that appear frequently
in spam, such as the words "money-back guarantee" or "free." A
message that accumulated too many points is either rejected as
probable spam or delivered to a junk-mail folder. Aka content-based
filter.
B-to-B: Business-to-business (also B2B).
B-to-C: Business-to-consumer
(also B2C).
Blacklist: A list of senders
suspected of sending spam messages. The list is usually
compiled by domain name or Internet Protocal (IP) Address. Also
commonly referred to as Blocklist and Blackhole list.
If placed on a "blacklist" all messages sent to that company will be
rejected or "Blocked".
Block: A refusal by an ISP
or mail server not to forward your email message to the recipient.
Many ISPs block email from IP addresses or domains that have been
reported to send spam or viruses or have content that violates email
policy or spam filters.
Bonded Sender: A private
email-registration service, owned by email vendor Ironport, which
allows bulk emailers who agree to follow stringent email practices
and to post a monetary bond to bypass email filters of Bonded Sender
clients. The programs debits the bond for spam or other complaints
from recipients.
Bounce: A message that fails
delivery is said to have bounced. Emails can bounce for hundreds of
reasons: the email address is incorrect or has been closed; the
recipient’s mailbox is full, the mail server is down, or the system
detects spam or offensive content. There are two general
classifications for bounces including "Hard" and "Soft" bounces
which are defined below.
Bounce message: Message sent
back to an email sender reporting the message could not be delivered
and why. Many email systems have their own bounce reasons and
there is no set of standards followed by all email servers.
The bounce email address is typically defined in the email headers
using the X-Sender header.
Bounce handling: The process
of dealing with the email that has bounced and been returned to the
bounce email account. Most software products filter bounces
automatically.
Bounce rate: Also return rate:
Number of hard/soft bounces divided by the number of emails sent.
This is an inexact number because not all mail servers return
undeliverable messages.
Broadcast: The process of
sending the same email message to multiple recipients.
Bulk folder (also junk folder):
When an email software client perceives an email message as spam it
places it in the bulk or junk email folder. Most email clients
such as Microsoft Outlook allow you to view this junk folder and
mark email from specific recipients as "not spam".
CAN-SPAM: The CAN-SPAM Act
of 2003 establishes requirements for those who send commercial
email, spells out penalties for spammers and companies whose
products are advertised in spam if they violate the law, and gives
consumers the right to ask emailers to stop spamming them.
More information is available on the
FTC web site.
Catch-all: An email server
function that forwards all questionable email to a single mailbox.
The catch-all should be monitored regularly to find misdirected
email messages.
Challenge-response system:
An anti-spam program that requires a human being on the sender's end
to respond to an emailed challenge message before their messages can
be delivered to recipients. Senders who answer the challenge
successfully are added to an authorization list. Bulk emailers can
work with challenge-response if they designate an employee to watch
the sending address' mailbox and to reply to each challenge by hand.
Clickthrough & Clickthrough tracking: Refers to the
process of tagging all hyperlinks in an email message in order to
track how many links were clicked by which subscribers and when.
Clickthrough rate: Total
number of clicks on an email hyperlink divided by the number of
email messages delivered. Includes multiple clicks by a unique user.
Commercial email: Email
whose purpose, as a whole or in part, is to sell or advertise a
product or service or if its purpose is to persuade users to perform
an act, such as to purchase a product or click to a Web site whose
contents are designed to sell, advertise or promote.
Confirmation: An
acknowledgment of a subscription or information request.
"Confirmation" can be either a company statement that the email
address was successfully placed on a list, or a subscriber's
agreement that the subscribe request was genuine and not faked or
automatically generated by a third party.
Confirmed opt-in: Defines
the process of validating the email address that just subscribed to
your opt-in list. Typically this involves sending an automated
email address to a subscriber who must then click a confirmation
link in the email message. This prevents people from
maliciously subscribing other users.
Content: All the material in
an email message except for the headers showing the delivery route
and return-path information. Includes all words, images and links.
Co-registration: Arrangement
in which companies collecting registration information from users
(email sign-up forms, shopping checkout process, etc.) include a
separate box for users to check if they would also like to be added
to a specific third-party list.
Conversion: When an email
recipient performs a desired action based on a mailing you have
sent. A conversion could be signing up as a "lead", making a
purchase or "sale", calling to request more information, etc.
CPA: Cost per Action (also
can be Acquisition). Describes the cost of each acquisition or
conversion.
CPC: Cost per Click. A
method of paying for advertising based on a price per each unique
click.
CPM: Cost per Thousand.
Creative: An email message's
copy and any graphics.
CRM: Customer Relationship
Management technology and systems
Cross-campaign profiling: A
method used to understand how email respondents behave over multiple
campaigns.
Cross-post: To send the same
email message to at least two different mailing lists or discussion
groups.
CTR: (Click-Through Rate) is
the number of times an advertisement is clicked upon over the number
of times the advertisement is served. Typical click-through rates
have been declining (a click through rate of 1% would be very high).
The click-through rate will determine the cost of an advertising
campagn that was based on CPC and CPA.
Dedicated Server: An email
server used by only one client. A dedicated server is often more
costly than a shared server because it is used by a single client
instead of numerous clients.
Deduplication (deduping):
The
process of deduplication involves comparing sets of data, typically
personal details, and stripping out identical sets.
Delivered email: Number of emails sent successfully minus the
number of bounces and filtered messages. This number is often
inaccurate because not all receiving ISPs report on which email
didn't go through and why not. AOL is notorious for this.
Delivery tracking: The
process of measuring delivery rates by format, ISP or other factors
and delivery failures (bounces, invalid address, server and other
errors).
Denial-of-service attack (DOS):
An organized effort to disrupt email or Web service by sending more
messages or traffic than a server can handle, shutting it down until
the messages stop.
Deploy:The act of sending
the email campaign after testing.
Digest: A shortened version
of an email newsletter which replaces full-length articles with
clickable links to the full article at a Web site, often with a
brief summary of the contents.
Discussion group: An email
service in which individual members post messages for all group
members to read ("many to many.") In contrast, a newsletter is a
"one to many" broadcast, where comments by members or subscribers go
only to the message sender. Aka by the trademarked name Listserv.
DomainKeys: An anti-spam
software application being developed by Yahoo and using a
combination of public and private "keys" to authenticate the
sender's domain and reduce the chance that a spammer or hacker will
fake the domain sending address.
Domain Name System: How
computer networks locate Internet domain names and translate them
into IP addresses. The domain name is the actual name for an IP
address or range of IP addresses. E.g. MarketingSherpa.com. See
reverse DNS.
Double opt-in: A process
that requires new list joiners to take an action (such as clicking
on an emailed link to a personal confirmation page) in order to
confirm that they do want to be on the list. Sometimes interpreted
incorrectly by some email broadcast vendors to mean a new subscriber
who does not opt-out of or bounce a welcome message.
Dynamic content:
Email-newsletter content that changes from one recipient to the next
according to a set of predetermined rules or variables, usually
according to preferences the user sets when opting in to messages
from a sender. Dynamic content can reflect past purchases, current
interests or where the recipient lives.
ECOA: Email Change of
Address. A service that tracks email address changes and updates.
Effective rate: Metric that
measures how many of those who opened an email message clicked on a
link, usually measured as unique responders divided by unique opens.
Email address: The
combination of a unique user name and a sender domain (JohnDoe@anywhere.com).
The email address requires both the user name and the domain name.
Email appending: Service that matches email addresses to a
database of personal names and postal addresses. Appending may
require an "OK to add my name" reply from the subscriber before you
can add the name to the list.
Email client: The software
recipients use to read email, such as Outlook Express or Lotus
Notes.
Email Domain: Aka Domain.
The portion of the email address to the right of the @ sign. Useful
as an email address hygiene tool (e.g. identify all records where
the consumer entered "name@aol" as their email address and correct
it to "name@aol.com").
Email filter: A software
tool that categorizes, sorts or blocks incoming email, based either
on the sender, the email header or message content. Filters may be
applied at the recipient's level, at the email client, the ISP or a
combination.
Email Friendly Name Aka
Display Name, From name. The portion of the email address that is
displayed in most, though not all, email readers in place of, or in
addition to, the email address.
Email harvesting: An
automated process in which a robot program searches Web pages or
other Internet destinations for email addresses. The program
collects the address into a database, which frequently gets resold
to spammers or unethical bulk mailers. Many U.S. state laws forbid
harvesting. CAN-SPAM does not outlaw it by name but allows triple
damages against violators who compiled their mailing lists with
harvested names.
Email newsletter: Content
distributed to subscribers by email, on a regular schedule. Content
is seen as valued editorial in and of itself rather than primarily a
commercial message with a sales offer. See ezine.
Email Prefix: The portion of
the email address to the left of the @ sign.
Email vendor: Another name
for an email broadcast service provider, a company that sends bulk
(volume) email on behalf of their clients. Also email service
provider (ESP).
Enhanced whitelist: A super-whitelist
maintained by AOL for bulk emailers who meet strict delivery
standards, including fewer than 1 spam complaint for every 1,000
email messages. Emailers on the enhanced whitelist can bypass AOL
9.0’s automatic suppression of images and links.
AOL White
list GuideLines.
Event triggered email:
Pre-programmed messages sent automatically based on an event such as
a date or anniversary.
Ezine (also e-zine): Another
name for email newsletter, adapted from electronic ‘zine or
electronic magazine.
False positive: A legitimate
message mistakenly rejected or filtered as spam, either by an ISP or
a recipient's anti-spam program. The more stringent an anti-spam
program, the higher the false-positive rate.
FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions.
Filter: See email filter.
Firewall: A program or set
of programs designed to keep unauthorized users or messages from
accessing a private network. The firewall usually has rules or
protocols that authorize or prohibit outside users or messages. In
email, a firewall can be designed so thast messages from domains or
users listed as suspect because of spamming, hacking or forging will
not be delivered.
Footer:An area at the end of
an email message or newsletter that contains information that
doesn’t change from one edition to the next, such as contact
information,the company’s postal address or the email address the
recipient used to subscribe to mailings. Some software programs can
be set to place this information automatically.
Forward (also Forward to a
Friend: The process in which email recipients send your message
to people they know, either because they think their friends will be
interested in your message or because you offer incentives to
forward messages. Forwarding can be done through the recipient’s own
email client or by giving the recipient a link to click, which
brings up a registration page at your site, in which you ask the
forwarded to give his/her name and email address, the name/email
address of the person they want to send to and (optionally) a brief
email message explaining the reason for the forward.You can supply
the wording or allow the forward to write his/her own message. AKA
viral marketing.
From: Whatever appears in
the email recipient's inbox as your visible "from" name. Chosen by
the sender. May be a personal name, a brand name, an email address,
a blank space, or alpha-numeric gobbledegook. Note - this is not the
actual "from" contained in the header (see below) and may be
different than the email reply address. Easy to fake. Aka Email
Friendly Name.
Full-service provider: An
email vendor that also provides strategic consulting and creative
support, in addition to sending messages.
Gmail: A free email service
offered by Google, giving users 1GB of storage space, email search
and conversation threading. Gmail also uses technology to add
advertisements next to messages containing keywords that match of
those advertisers in its AdWords program, a policy that means
promotional materials sent by one company could carry text ads of
its competitors.
HTML message: Email message which contains any type of
formatting other than text. This may be as simple as programming
that sets the text in a specific font (bold, italics, Courier 10
point, etc.). It also includes any graphic images, logos and colors.
Hard bounce: Message sent to
an invalid, closed or nonexistent email account.
Headers:
The
documentation that accompanies the body of an email message. Headers
contain information on the email itself and the route it's taken
across the Internet. Recipients can normally see the "to" (identity
of recipient), "from" (identity of sender) and "subject"
(information in the subject line) headers in their inbox. They can
be modified to influence their decision to open or delete an email.
House list: The list of
email addresses an organization develops on its own. (Your own
list.)
Hygiene: The process of
cleaning a database to correct incorrect or outdated values. See
also List Hygiene.
IMAP: Internet Message
Access Protocol, a standard protocol for accessing email from a
server.
Impression: A single view of one page by a single user, used
in calculating advertising rates.
IP address/Internet Protocol
Address: A unique number assigned to each device connected to
the Internet. An IP address can be dynamic, meaning it changes each
time an email message or campaign goes out, or it can be static,
meaning it does not change. Static IP addresses are best, because
dynamic IP addresses often trigger spam filters.
ISP: Internet Service
Provider. Examples: AOL, EarthLink, MSN
Joe job: A spam-industry
term for a forged email, in which a spammer or hacker fakes a
genuine email address in order to hide his identity.
Landing page: A Web page
viewed after clicking on a link within an email. Also may be called
a microsite, splash page, bounce page, or click page.
Linkrot: What happens when
links go bad over time, either because a Web site has shut down or a
site has stopped supporting a unique landing page provided in an
email promotion.
Links:
Text links,
hyperlinks, graphics or images which, when clicked or when pasted
into the browser, direct the prospect to another online location. To
be most effective in motivating action, links must be obvious to the
visitor or recipient. When images or graphics are used as links, or
when hyperlinks are used, always provide a corresponding text link
as well.
List: The list of email
addresses to which you send your message. Can be either your house
list or a third-party list that sends your message on your behalf.
List fatigue: A condition
producing diminishing returns from a mailing list whose members are
sent too many offers, or too many of the same offers, in too short a
period of time.
List host: See email
vendors.
List hygiene: The act of
maintaining a list so that hard bounces and unsubscribed names are
removed from mailings. Some list owners also use an email
change-of-address service to update old or abandoned email addresses
(hopefully with a permission step baked in) as part of this process.
List management: How a
mailing list is set up, administered and maintained. The list
manager has daily responsibility over list operation, including
processing subscribes and unsubscribes, bounce management, list
hygiene, etc. The list manager can be the same as the database
manager but is not always the same person as the list owner. See
list owner.
List owner: The organization
or individual who has gathered a list of email addresses. Ownership
does not necessarily imply "with permission."
List rental: The process in
which a publisher or advertiser pays a list owner to send its
messages to that list. Usually involves the list owner sending the
message's on the advertiser's behalf. (If someone hands over their
list to you, beware.)
List sale: The actual
purchase of a mailing list along with the rights to mail it
directly. Permission can only be "sold" if the subsequent mailings
continue to match the frequency, brand name, content, and "from" of
the past owner's mailings -- and even then this is a somewhat shaky
procedure on the spam-front. You are in effect buying a publication,
and not just a list.
Mail bomb: An orchestrated
attempt to shut down a mail server by sending more messages than it
can handle in a short period of time. See DOS.
Mailing list: A list of
email addresses that receive mailings or discussion-group
messages.
Mail loop: A communication
error between two email servers, usually happening when a
misconfigured email triggers an automated response from the
recipient server.
mailto: : A code to make an
email address in either a text or HTML email immediately clickable (mailto:JohnDoe@anywhere.com).
When the link is clicked, it usually opens the user's email client
and inserts the email address in the To: link of a blank message.
MTA: Mail Transfer Agent. A
computer that forwards email from senders to recipients (or to relay
sites) and stores incoming email.
MSP: Mail service provider,
such as Hotmail.
MUA: Mail User Agent (see
email client).
Multi-part MIME: Also known
(confusingly) as an "email sniffer." Message format which includes
both an HTML and a text-only version in the same message. Most (but
not all) email clients receiving messages in this format will
automatically display the version the user’s system is set to show.
Systems that can’t show HTML should show the text version instead.
This doesn’t always work — in particular for many Lotus Notes users.
Also, no data, except HTML open rates and possibly link click
tracking, is transmitted back to the sender regarding which version
a recipient wound up viewing.
MX: Mail Exchange Record
Nth name: The act of
segmenting a list for a test in which names are pulled from the main
list for the test cell by number -- such as every 5th name on the
list. See also a/b split.
Open rate: The number of
HTML message recipients who opened your email, usually as a
percentage of the total number of emails sent. The open rate is
considered a key metric for judging an email campaign's success, but
it has several problems. The rate indicates only the number of
emails opened from the total amount sent, not just those that were
actually delivered. Opens also can't be calculated on text emails.
Also, some email clients also users to scan message content without
actually opening the message, which is falsely calculated as an
open. See preview pane.
Open relay: An SMTP email
server that allows outsiders to relay email messages that are
neither for nor from local users. Often exploited by spammers and
hackers.
Opt-in: A specific,
pro-active, request by an individual email recipient to have their
own email address placed on a specific mailing list. Many list
renters and buyers now require list owners to provide proof of
opt-in, including the actual email or IP address date and time the
request was received.
Opt-out: A specific request
to remove an email address from a specific list, or from all lists
operated by a single owner. Also, the process of adding an email
addresses to lists without the name's pre-approval, forcing names
who don't want to be on your list to actively unsubscribe.
Pass-along: An email
recipient who got your message via forwarding from a subscriber.
(Some emails offer "forward to a friend" in the creative, but the
vast majority of pass-alongs happen using email clients, and not
that tech.) Pass-alongs can affect the formatting of the email,
often stripping off HTML. Also known as viral.
Permission: The implicit
approval given when a person actively requests to have their own
email address added to a list.
Personalization: A targeting
method in which an email message appears to have been created only
for a single recipient. Personalization techniques include adding
the recipient's name in the subject line or message body, or the
message offer reflects a purchasing, link clicking, or transaction
history.
PGP (Pretty Good Privacy):
Software used to encrypt and protect email as it moves from one
computer to another and can be used to verify a sender's identity.
Phishing: A form of identity
theft in which a scammer uses an authentic-looking email to trick
recipients into giving out sensitive personal information, such as
credit-card or bank account numbers, Social Security numbers and
other data.
Plain text: Text in an email
message that includes no formatting code. See HTML.
POP: Post Office Protocol,
which an email client uses to send to or receive messages from an
email server.
Postmaster: Whom to contact
at a Web site, ISP or other site to request information, get help
with delivery or register complaints.
Preferences: Options a user
can set to determine how they want to receive your messages, how
they want to be addresses, to which email address message should go
and which messages they want to receive from you. The more
preferences a user can specify, the more likely you'll send relevant
email.
Preview pane: The window in
an email client that allows the user to scan message content without
actually clicking on the message. See open rate.
Privacy policy: A clear
description of how your company uses the email addresses and other
information it gathers via opt-in requests for newsletters, company
information or third-party offers or other functions. If you rent,
sell or exchange your list to anyone outside your company, or if you
add email addresses to opt-out messages, you should state so in the
privacy policy. State laws may also compel you to explain your
privacy policy, where to put the policy statement so people will see
it and even in form the policy should be displayed.
Queue: Where an email
message goes after you send it but before the list owner approves it
or before the list server gets around to sending it. Some list
software allows you to queue a message and then set a time to send
it automatically, either during a quiet period on the server or at a
time when human approval isn't available.
Read email: Not measurable.
Only opens and clicks are measureable in any way. You can never know
if a recipient simply read your message.
Registration: The process
where someone not only opts in to your email program but provides
some additional information, such as name, address, demographic data
or other relevant information, usually by using a Web form.
Relationship email: An email
message that refers to a commercial action -- a purchase, complaint
or customer-support request -- based on a business relationship
between the sender and recipient. Generally are not covered by
CAN-SPAM requirements.
Reply-to: The email address
that receives messages sent from users who click “reply” in their
email clients. Can differ from the “from”address which can be an
automated or unmonitored email address used only to send messages to
a distribution list. “Reply-to” should always be a monitored
address.
Reverse DNS: The process in
which an IP address is matched correctly to a domain name, instead
of a domain name being matched to an IP address. Reverse DNS is a
popular method for catching spammers who use invalid IP addresses.
If a spam filter or program can't match the IP address to the domain
name, it can reject the email.
Rich Media: Creative that
includes video, animation, and/or sound. Rich-media emails often
collect high open and click rates but requires more bandwidth and
are less compatible with different email clients than text or
regular HTML email-format messages. Some mailers also consider
transactional email "rich".
ROI:
The term ROI refers to the
return on investment for advertising funds invested in media.
Seed emails: Email addresses
placed on a list (sometimes secretly) to determine what messages are
sent to the list and/or to track delivery rate and/or visible
appearance of delivered messages. Seeds may also be placed on Web
sites and elsewhere on the Internet to track spammers' harvesting
activities.
Segmentation:
Segmentation is
the act of taking your house mailing list and separating it so that
recipients get different content based on their demographics, buying
patterns, interest areas, etc.
Select: A segment of a list
determined by any number of attributes, such as source of name, job
title, purchasing history, etc. CPM list renters pay an additional
fee per thousand names for each select on top of the base list
price.
Selective Unsubscribe: An
unsubscribe mechanism that allows a consumer to selectively
determine which email newsletters they wish to continue receiving
while stopping the sending of others.
Sender ID: The informal name
for a new anti-spam program combining two existing protocols: Sender
Policy Framework and CallerID. SenderID authenticates email senders
and blocks email forgeries and faked addresses.
Sender Policy Framework (also
SPF): A protocol used to eliminate email forgeries. A line of
code called an SPF record is placed in a sender’s Domain Name Server
information. The incoming mail server can verify a sender by reading
the SPF record before allowing a message through.
Sent emails: Number of email
names transmitted in a single broadcast. Does not reflect how many
were delivered or viewed by recipients.
Server: A program or
computer system that stores and distributes email from one mailbox
to another, or relays email from one server to another in a network.
Shared server: An email
server used by more than one company or sender. Shared servers are
less expensive to use because the broadcast vendor can spread the
cost over more users. However, senders sharing a server risk having
emails blocked by major ISPs if one of the other users does
something to get the server's IP address blacklisted. See
dedicated server.
Signature: A line or two of
information found in the closing of an email, usually followed the
sender’s name. Signatures can include advertising information, such
as a company name, product, brand message or marketing call to
action (subscribe to a company newsletter with the email subscribe
address or Web registration form, or visit a Web site with the URL
listed).
SMTP: Simple Mail Transfer
Protocol, the most common protocol for sending email messages
between email servers.
Snail mail: postal mail.
Soft bounce: Email sent to
an active (live) email address but which is turned away before being
delivered. Often, the problem is temporary -- the server is down or
the recipient's mailbox is over quota. The email might be held at
the recipient's server and delivered later, or the sender's email
program may attempt to deliver it again. Soft-bounce reports are not
always accurate because they don't report all soft bounces or the
actual reason for the bounce.
Solo mailing: A one-time
broadcast to an email list, separate from regular newsletters or
promotions, and often including a message from an outside advertiser
or a special promotion from the list owner.
Spam: The popular name for
unsolicited commercial email. However, some email recipients define
spam as any email they no longer want to receive, even if it comes
from a mailing list they joined voluntarily.
Spamcop: A blacklist and
IP-address database, formerly privately owned but now part of the
email vendor Ironport. Many ISPs check the IP addresses of incoming
email against Spamcop’s records to determine whether the address has
been blacklisted due to spam complaints.
Sponsorship swap: An
agreement between email list owners, publishers or advertisers to
sponsor each other's mailings or newsletters for free. See ad
swap.
Spoofing: The practice of
changing the sender's name in an email message so that it looks as
if it came from another address.
Subject line: Copy that
identifies what an email message is about, often designed to entice
the recipient into opening the message. The subject line appears
first in the recipient's inbox, often next to the sender's name or
email address. It is repeated in the email message's header
information inside the message.
Subscribe: The process of
joining a mailing list, either through an email command, by filling
out a Web form, or offline by filling out a form or requesting to be
added verbally. (If you accept verbal subscriptions, you should
safeguard yourself by recording it and storing recordings along with
time and date, in a retrievable format.)
Subscriber: The person who
has specifically requested to join a mailing list. A list has both
subscribers, who receive the message from the sender, and pass-alongs.
Suppression file: A list of
email addresses you have removed from your regular mailing lists,
either because they have opted out of your lists or because they
have notified other mailers that they do not want to receive
mailings from your company. Required by CAN-SPAM. AKA Do-Not-Email
list.
Test: A necessary step
before sending an email campaign or newsletter. Many email clients
permit you to send a test email before sending a regular email
newsletter or solo mailing, in which you would send one copy of the
message to an in-house email address and then review it for
formatting or copy errors or improperly formatted links. Email
marketers should also send a test campaign to a list of email
addresses not in the deployment database to determine likely
response rates and how well different elements in the message
perform.
Text newsletter: Plain
newsletter with words only, no colors, graphics, fonts or pictures;
can be received by anyone who has email.
Thank-you page: Web page
that appears after user has submitted an order or a form online. May
be a receipt.
Throttling: The practice of
regulating how many email message a broadcaster sends to one ISP or
mail server at a time. Some ISPs bounce email if it receives too
many messages from one sending address at a time.
Transactional email: also
known as transactive email. A creative format where the recipient
can enter a transaction in the body of the email itself without
clicking to a web page first. Transactions may be answering a
survey, or purchasing something.
UCE: Unsolicited Commercial
Email, also called spam or junk mail.
Unique Reference Number: A
unique number assigned to a list member, usually by the
email-broadcast software, and used to track member behavior (clicks,
subscribes, unsubscribe) or to identify the member to track email
delivery.
URL (Uniform Resource Locator):
The Web address for a page, always beginning with http:// (or
https:// for a secure page) and followed by www. (or variations,
although some URLs are set up not to include this information) and
the domain name.
Unsubscribe:
To request to be removed from a
specific list or newsletter.
Vendor: Any company that
provides a service. See email vendors.
Verification: A program that
determines an email came from the sender listed in the return path
or Internet headers; designed to stop email from forged senders.
Video e-mail: An email
message that includes a video file, either inserted into the message
body, accessible through a hotlink to a Web site or accompanying it
in an attachment (least desirable because many ISPs block executable
attachments to avoid viruses).
Virus: A program or computer
code that affects or interferes with a computer’s operating system
and gets spread to other computers accidentally or on purpose
through email messages, downloads, infected CDs or network messages.
See worm.
Web bug (also Web beacon): A
1 pixel-by-1 pixel image tag added to an HTMLmessage and used to
track open rates by email address. Opening the message, either in
the preview pane or by clicking on it, activates the bug and sends a
signal to the Web site, where special software tracks and records
the signal as an open.
Webmail (also Web mail): Any of several Web-based email
clients where clients have to go to a Web site to access or download
email instead of using a desktop application. Some examples are
Gmail, Yahoo! Mail and Hotmail.
Welcome message: Message
sent automatically to new list members as soon as their email
addresses are added successfully.
Whitelist:
Advance-authorized list of email addresses, held by an ISP,
subscriber or other email service provider, which allows email
messages to be delivered regardless of spam filters. See also
enhanced white list.
Worm: A piece of malicious
code delivered via an executable attachment in email or over a
computer network and which spreads to other computers by
automatically sending itself to every email address on a recipient’s
contact list or address book. See virus.
X-Sender: This is a custom
email header that defines what address bounces should be returned
to.
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