DMARC How To Use It
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  1. #1
    Senior Member Reputation points: 242074
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    Quote Originally Posted by Yankeeman07 View Post
    Most Hosting companies provide access to Advanced DNS Records - some add automatically - but not the DMARC Email Address which has to be added manually.
    My primary company email address was actually added.
    Truth is, now that I think about it, I might have done it myself, but I don't remember doing it, because of which email addresses was being used.
    However, they recommend that people use a fresh email address because it's a publicly available one that might attract spam.

    Re: Ed. I had the same experience with Namecheap actually, and I ended up buying a dedicated IP and worked to get it un-blacklisted. Cost me $24/year for multiple domains. But then again, I don't send out 100,000 emails.

  2. #2
    Quote Originally Posted by abfunders View Post
    My primary company email address was actually added.
    Truth is, now that I think about it, I might have done it myself, but I don't remember doing it, because of which email addresses was being used.
    However, they recommend that people use a fresh email address because it's a publicly available one that might attract spam.

    Re: Ed. I had the same experience with Namecheap actually, and I ended up buying a dedicated IP and worked to get it un-blacklisted. Cost me $24/year for multiple domains. But then again, I don't send out 100,000 emails.
    Was that an issue of doing marketing emails from your own primary domain, or using Namecheap's shared email servers for its webhosting clients?

  3. #3
    Member Reputation points: 4076
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    Quote Originally Posted by Incbiz440 View Post
    Was that an issue of doing marketing emails from your own primary domain, or using Namecheap's shared email servers for its webhosting clients?
    First, that was not an issue of sending from primary domain. You should not use your primary domain for anything but hosting your website, because if you email from it (even just basic emailing) and people mark your email as SPAM, then your entire domain could become backlisted and then Google will not trust your domain and in turn not let people/traffic to your site, without a warning to not proceed.

    Second, it had nothing to do with sending emails from NameCheap's servers (we don't use them to send from). I never got confirmation from NameCheap as to the source of the problem (they wouldn't admit their fault) but from what I gathered at the time it had to do with where the domain was parked after it was purchased.... those servers were tainted and in turn your domain then becomes blacklisted.... guilty by association.

    Hope that helped answer your question.
    Ed McGilley
    text/call: 631-309-2323
    leads@b2bleadgenmachine.com
    https://b2bleadgenmachine.com/



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