Showing posts with label b2b. Show all posts
Showing posts with label b2b. Show all posts

Riding the ‘Data Influx’ is meant for pros



From gigabytes to terabytes, exabytes and zettabytes, infinite amount of data is available through various sources. The accessibility of data provides business leverage on one hand, however if mismanaged it can prove to an expensive resource, something that will be carried around like dead weight. Data and Database Management are necessary evils, without which data decays, customers freeze and revenues retire.

The fundamental Data Management Process involves:-

Data Appending
Data Cleaning
Data Updating
Data Maintaining 
Data Enriching


The Business Benefits of adopting data and database management solutions include:-

developing a comprehensive, authentic list of prospects
targeting a niche audience
obtaining new prospects
identifying data decay
decreasing rates of undelivered emails
cost effectively reviving old, dormant contacts
giving new life to marketing campaigns
maximizing revenues 
efficiently utilizing business data

Data Management Methods 

B2B Data Appending
Data Enhancement
Data Cleansing
List Building
Phone & Fax Appending
Data Validation
Email Appending
Data Profiling
ECOA Appending
NCOA Appending
Data Enrichment
Data Acquisition

Maintaining data is important in developing updated databases with credible information. It is essential to keep data squeaky clean, without which it does not hold much value at all. With data becoming too big with ‘big data’ repositories, organizations have no choice but to adopt data and database management methods. Otherwise Good Luck with finding your way through the ever evolving data maze!


B2bdatapartners data cleansing and management services can help you sweep the dirty data and experience advantages of squeaky clean data.

For more information:

Visit: http://www.b2bdatapartners.com/
Email: info@b2bdatapartners.com
Call: 800-382-4081

Spam emails are considered as the unwanted pests


Anti-spam measures are taken by every email server to block out the delivery of any suspected or spam emails. Spam emails are considered as the unwanted pests. Companies and businesses go to great lengths to block out any spam mails from entering their mail servers. They use various mechanisms to identify these spam mails.

Any email that is suspected or identified as a spam mail is either immediately deleted or sent directly to the recipient’s junk folder instead of the Inbox. This way the recipient never sees the email. 

Sometimes the imperfection of anti-spamming measures increases the problem for the email marketers. Here are the reasons:

Sometimes a perfectly normal mail is labeled as a spam. This particular marketing email might be perfectly legitimate, but might get caught up in the anti-spam net. 
Each mail service applies a different kind of anti-spam mechanism to control spam. This becomes difficult for email marketers to take into account all the anti-spam mechanisms and send out legitimate marketing emails. 
You rarely get any feedback when your email gets spammed. 

Fortunately there are ways you can ensure that your email gets delivered straight to your prospect’s mailbox.   


B2Bdatapartners’ smart hard bounce management tool removes all bounce messages. It eases your burden of correcting the invalid addresses. Our proprietary hard bounce management tool can scrub your existing customer database by verifying it against our in-house master data file.

For more information:

Call: 800-382-4081

What causes your emails to bounce back?

Before you come up with a proper solution to your email deliverability problem, you need to know what causes them in the first place and how your deliverability is actually controlled. In reality, there are 7 primary filters through which your email needs to pass through. These filters are used by ISPs and corporate system administrators as they spam trap as many junk emails as possible hitting their server.

These 7 filters are:

1. Public Blacklists: There are a number of organizations like MAPS and Spam Cop that maintains lists of IP addresses that are linked to known or suspected spammers. These organizations make spammers public for ISPs and others to use them in screening out spam.

2. Private Blacklists: There are many ISPs and corporate system administrators that also maintain their own list of IPs for suspected spammers. There are different criteria based on which these spammers are suspected, such as,

• Complaints received from various subscribers
• Unknown user rates
• Server configuration issues

3. Fingerprinting/Spam Traps: Bright mail is considered to be the most commonly known fingerprinting/spam trap system. They filter known spam messages after they are matched against those that have generated previous complaints, or have delivered spam trap addresses. The “From” address is also considered.

4. Machine Learning-based Content Filters: As the name suggests, these filters are based on the words and phrases present in the email. This can be the content present in the body or the header.

5. Server Configuration: These filters instantly block the emails based on the server configurations.

6. Volume Cap: Some ISPs block your mails if the frequency or the number of connections is too high and exceed the threshold. Be careful so that you don’t surpass your limit.

7. Challenge Response: Some systems require a reply from your end to a challenge message. This usually proves you to be a real person. Such a filter basically confirms your email and domain and sends it to the “allowed sender” list.

B2Bdatapartners’ smart hard bounce management tool removes all bounce messages. It eases your burden of correcting the invalid addresses. Our proprietary hard bounce management tool can scrub your existing customer database by verifying it against our in-house master data file.

For more information:

Call: 800-382-4081

Types of Hard and Soft Bounces





In the last post, we told you what hard and soft bounces are, this post will help you know their different types.


General Bounce (GB)
If the bounce message is unclear and the email server is not able to deliver the email message, it is treated as soft bounces.
Example: "Subject: Undeliverable mail"

General Soft Bounce - (SB)
Email is not delivered to the recipient email address temporarily by the email server.
Example: "Connection timed out."

Soft Bounce - Dns Failure (SBDF)
Email is not delivered to the recipient email address due to a DNS problem.
Example: "Host is unreachable"

Soft Bounce - Mailbox Full (SBMF)

Email is not delivered to the recipient email address as the recipient's email box is full.
Example: "Mailbox over quota"

Soft Bounce - Message Size Too Large (SBMS)
Email is not delivered to the recipient email address because the message size is too large.
Example: "Exceeded maximum inbound message size"

Transient Bounce (TB)
Email is not delivered to the recipient email address temporarily, but it is still trying.
Example: "Warning: message still undelivered after 4 hours. We will keep trying until message is 2 days old"

Mail Block - Attachment Detected (MBAD)
In this case, the recipient's email server is blocking your email due to an attachment.
Example: "552 Disapproved attachment"

Mail Block - Relay Denied (MBRD)
This message indicates that the recipient's email server is blocking the email send by the sender’s email server.
Example: "551 relaying denied"

Non Bounce (NB)

This clarifies that the message could be a reply from the recipient and was not a bounce, or maybe an unknown bounce format.

Mail Block - General (MB)
This message indicates that the recipient's email server is blocking the email send by the sender’s email server.
Example: "550 Message REFUSED by peer"

Mail Block - Known Spammer (MBKS)
Indicates that the recipient's email server believes you are a spammer and is therefore blocking your email.
Example: "REJECT Known SPAM source"

Mail Block - Spam Detected (MBSD)
Indicates that for the recipient's email server the message content appears like spam and is therefore blocking your email.
Example: "550 Possible spam detected"

B2Bdatapartners’ bounce management tool helps you get rid of all the hard and soft bounces and cleanse your customer database.


All you Need to Know About Soft Bounce

Bounce or bounce-back, is a term associated with an email returned back to the sender after being rejected for delivery due to some reasons. The reason for bounce-back can be made out from the description provided in the bounce type itself.

There are two types of bounces, Hard Bounce and Soft Bounce. In case of hard bounce, an email remains permanently undeliverable, due to the reasons mentioned in the previous post. However, in case of soft bounce, it’s a temporary problem where the message gets bounced due to unavailability of the email server or inbox being full.

In soft bounce, the sender’s email reaches the mail server and the mailing address is also recognized by the recipient’s mail server, yet the mail is bounced back undelivered before reaching the recipient. There are many reasons due to which, an email may be soft bounced:

Server is down
Mail server is swamped with messages
Recipient's mailbox is full
User has abandoned the mailbox
Message is too large

In most cases, a soft bounce message may be redirected manually to the recipient's domain by the network administrator or delivered at another time. Generally, an attempt is made to deliver the email regularly for a few days as the email address is valid, however, if even after several attempts it remains undelivered, it becomes a soft bounce.

There are different types of hard and soft bounces, which will be explained in the next post.

Improve email deliverability with Hard Bounce Management:

When an email gets returned to the sender and remains permanently undelivered, it is known as a hard bounce. This can happen for a number of reasons such as:

• Invalid email addresses
• The email does not exist anymore
• Some typing error
• The recipient’s email server has permanently blocked your email

In a nutshell, bounce is an email that is returned to the sender due to some reason or the other. There can be technical reasons that act as a hindrance. The email infrastructure identifies the delivery problem occurred and sends an informative email to the sender stating that the email has not got through. This is also known as the bounce message.

Many a times the system might keep your undelivered messages on hold and will try to send them again later. You will get a mail from your system stating that the following addresses failed to receive your email.

Such temporary problems are usually handled by your email system in various ways. It also depends on the nature of the problem along with the services you are using to deliver your email.

The only good thing about bounce back messages are most of the time you get a message that your email has not reached the following email addresses and has not been delivered. This gives you ample of scope to take appropriate action.

B2Bdatapartners’ smart hard bounce management tool removes all bounce messages. It eases your burden of correcting the invalid addresses. Our proprietary hard bounce management tool can scrub your existing customer database by verifying it against our in-house master data file.