Lack of Can Spam Compliance Can Cost You

It does not benefit you to not follow the federal Can Spam act. Not only can you have a financial penalty if prosecuted, but you can waste time and money trying to send to a spammy list.

If your e-newsletter list has been created by getting email addresses off of websites, from organization directories, or harvested from publications you read or subscribe to you are in violation of the federal Can Spam act. Your names fit into the “harvested” category. Many clients simply say “no one will catch me” and they decide to play the odds. Yes, it is true they may not be caught, but they may end up spending more money than they bargained for in trying to email to this type of list.

In several cases clients that came to us did not truthfully divulge where their large 6,000 member lists had come from. In both cases they paid money to us to set up subscriber accounts with a service to use to send out their mailings. One client purchased over 10 hours of additional time to scan his printed subscriber lists to create a digital version. In each cases after the first mailing the professional e-newsletter sending services shut down the accounts. One closed the account outright, and two forced these large lists to become double opted in. This means that a confirmation message was sent out and anyone who did not respond would never receive mailings again. Out of the nearly 6,000 that were on these lists under 100 responded that they wanted the mailings. So in essence with a spammy list the customer just threw money out the window in trying to send email to a harvested name list.

The lesson to be learned here is that a spammy list does not do you any good. You may end up spending more money trying to send to this type  list and still end up being shut down. It is simply not worth the effort or risk.

November Newsletter Published

We invite you to review our November e-newsletter online today. In this issue we talk about several topics of interest:

1. Blogging and SEO – Working Hand in Hand

2. Twitter Made Easy with Social Oomph

3. Personal Information on Google – Can You Ever Remove It?

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Topics for this month are:

Graphic Electric Inc. Moves to the Web

Facebook Advertising Reviewed: Is It Worth the Money?

Microsoft Releases a New Search Engine Called Bing

As always you’ll get my candid comments and review as well as notes on special features or things to keep an eye on.

CAN SPAM – Are You Breaking the Law?

I have recently had two situations that were similar in nature and wanted to talk about the two as you may benefit from the experience.

One situation the person had paid a party on eLance to scrap emails (harvested them) from websites manually in order to create a email list so they could send a notice of a new product they were selling. I was presented with the lists and asked to load them into the subscriber database control panel. I had to approve that the list was not a violation of the services terms of use and that the lists were  CAN SPAM compliant. I stopped the load and had to ask where the list had come from and found out the history.

It is very important to understand that lists of this nature – harvested emails, even done manually do not meet the criteria to pass review and do violate Federal Law. No one likes spam and although you might be able to get away with loading a list of that nature by lying your way through, are you willing to be held legally responsible for participating in that?

In another situation the person said that they could buy a list of 120,000 names from a party who they did not personally know for about $1,100 and that the list was CAN SPAM compliant and had been double opted in. This person was even told they should set up shell domains and spam, whoops send, to the list the first time and then resend to the list the second time on another domain – so the emails would not be blocked by ISPs. This is a spammer technique clear and simple – milk a domain for a few days, then drop it and move to another.

I have to say in both cases a business really flirts with disaster by doing shady deals and gray market activities in an effort to generate business even in a tough economy. My question in both these cases is: is it worth tarnishing your business reputation to send out spam? You hate spam, but you are you willing to spam others to make money for your own business?

For me, I will not participate in these types of enterprises. They are in violation of the law and I simply cannot risk get drawn into a bad situation that may spiral into legal action.

My question to you today is, are you breaking the law too? Or possibly just contemplating breaking the law. Maybe you just don’t know what they law says. Find out what the truth is when it comes to email lists and what is considered spam by reviewing the CAN SPAM act here.

What is interesting is that after these two conversations I checked with management at Topica (where my own e-newsletter list resides) about their policy on list creation and was told that they do not even allow the load of info, sales, and other generic email account names to the subscriber’s list as they know that these may be harvested emails. They focus on being totally CAN SPAM compliant and would not knowingly accept a harvest list of these natures. Vertical Response flags lists that are large (over 1,000 names on load) and asks the list owner to reconfirm in writing that the list is clean and not in violation of their terms of service or the CAN SPAM act. They will not even send the emails out until you provide answers.