Spam Not
"Spam not, lest ye be spammed." ~Mari Peckham
Just yesterday, I received over 40,000 emails from a person who
had harvested a contact email address from one of my websites.
The person may or may not have personally secured my email
address, but since I use it only to receive email feedback from
my website and never to send mail, I know that it was a
harvested address. Because of the nature of my use of this email
address, I also have a "Thank you for contacting us."
autoresponder message in place there.
My server was mad at me. My entire system was mad at me. I
couldn't conduct my normal business and send out email that
needed to be sent out, because my computer was hard at work
downloading email upon email.
How can something like this happen?
Simple enough, really. My email was picked up off of my website
and added to an autoresponder. If it had been a regular email
account, I would have received an unsolicited message that I
would have easily deleted, no big deal. But since my email
address was attached to an autoresponder, it started a vicious
cycle of email autoresponse.
The person who had sent me the email - well, they ended up with
40,000 "Thank you for contacting us." emails in their box from
me.
I'm sure that that wasn't very pleasant for them, either. And
the fact of the matter is that they may have not even realized
that they had done anything wrong.
Spam is bad. Not all spammers are bad people, though. Some of
them are just misinformed or inexperienced Internet marketers.
I'm the first to admit that marketing can be frustrating. Just
when you've hit the wall and can't think of another fresh
marketing idea to get new people to your site, along comes a
company that offers you a list of 100,000 email addresses for
just $24.95 or some other unbelievable deal. Wow! What an
opportunity! Affordable, even! It's hard not to jump all over an
offer like that.
But beware! It's hard to say where those email addresses are
coming from.
Many unscrupulous companies use "harvesting" software that
spiders the Internet and lifts email address off of websites.
They then compile lists of these email addresses and sell them
as "opt-in safelists" for profit.
As a marketer, using these lists can get you in tons of trouble.
Once labeled as a Spammer, it is hard to rid yourself of that
reputation, whether you were spamming on purpose, or you were a
victim of a bad "list". You can be dropped from your hosting
service or ISP. Companies that you are promoting using Spam will
cancel your accounts.
Bottom line: If you are not sure that it is NOT Spam, then don't
do it. Develop your own list of opt-in subscribers by offering a
newsletter, free information, or something else that will get
people to take notice of you. Both YahooGroups
(http://groups.yahoo.com/) and Topica (http://www.topica.com)
offer free, easy-to-use service that will manage your
subscribers for you. You can find other similar services on the
Internet. This is one of the most responsive forms of
advertising, because you have the opportunity to develop a
relationship with your list members.
You can also use a mailing list building service, such as Free
Mailer 2000 (http://www.freemailer2000.com), although you will
need to advertise your mailing list builder site in order to
build your mailing list.
Safelists can be another safe way to get the word out about your
business, but vary in responsiveness. I recommend the services
of SafeListBoys (http://www.safelistboys.com) to help you find
lists and easily manage your safelist activity for a small
monthly fee. You can also find new safelists by entering
"safelists" in any search engine, but watch out for those "BULK"
mailing list services that may fall in the unscrupulous SPAM
category. Rule of thumb, if you aren't a member yourself and
know for a fact that the list is opt-in, don't use it!
If you are choosing to spam, stop immediately. It may be getting
you a handful of responses right now, but the painful
consequences of your actions can cancel out any benefits that
you may find.
If we, as an Internet marketing community, would all agree to
market responsibly, the Internet would soon be a better place to
work and live. What comes around goes around. Spam not, lest ye
be spammed.