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Email List Verification Process Explained

Email List Verification Process Explained By James Carner

Email List Verification Process Explained

My last article was all about email list validation. Is there a difference between email validation and email verification? Yes there is. Email validation fixes format issues and syntax errors while email verification reports if an email is valid (does the mailbox exist) and if not, lists the reason for the return path. Email validation fixes and/or removes duplicates, disposables, departmentals, botclickers, false positives, slow responses, forwarders, format errors, unicode characters and in some cases, checks the mail exchange record for numerous warning signs.

Email verification is all about non-return email deliverability by avoiding auto responders that can hurt your sender reputation. Valid emails without a return-path are favorable with email administrators and email service providers. The more emails you send, the more likely you will encounter bounces (hard or soft), vacation emails, challenge responses, replies from list servers or feedback reports.

An email verification service will use these steps in order to achieve true verification (not in order and not all verification companies do these step by step):

  • Mail advertisements to your list. You get the best results when you send a direct SMTP handshake with content. This could agitate your subscribers because you are not in control of the content being sent.
  • Appending database. A collection of emails with the last known deliverability date which is updated often.
  • Check social media email addresses. Social Media email addresses tend to be the unique email address of the holder. Some verifiers have a list of Facebook or Twitter accounts and append to that.
  • Send a blank email via SMTP (simulate a direct message delivery) to authenticate the user.
  • Establish a connection to the mail server via an SMTP protocol (based on TCP). By using connection-oriented dispatch service packaging to establish the connection with hello messages, the sender’s address is transmitted and the receiving server submits the message from this address to be accepted. Then the addressee’s address is transmitted.
  • Emulate a second message dispatch. No message is actually sent during the email availability check. This process establishes the connection with the mail server, sends a hello message, transmits the sender’s address (options/sender) to pretend there is a message and then transmits the subscriber’s mailbox address (an email address being checked). As soon as the receiving server confirms or denies the requested mailbox availability, the email verification tool disconnects.
  • DNS Response times from two locations (Timeouts). If the verifier does not receive a response from a DNS server during a specified period of time (1 – 2 seconds), verifiers will make new attempts using another DNS gateway.
  • Send through different ports in case of roaming or receiver scenarios. In example, if port 25 is intercepted, then tunnel to another transparent proxy or through port 587 and/or other options.
  • Enhanced mail system status codes check. Success (valid email) specifies that the DNS is reporting a positive delivery status. Detailed status codes may provide notification of transformations required for delivery checks.
  • A persistent transient failure is when the message sent is valid, but persistence of some temporary condition has caused abandonment or delay of attempts to send the message. If the code accompanies a delivery failure report, sending in the future may be successful.
  • A permanent failure is when the email is not likely to be resolved by resending the message in the current form. Some change to the message or the destination must be made for successful verification.
  • Querying the mail exchange record. Bad MX emails have slow response times, 4xx errors, full load distribution, the mail exchange isn’t configured correctly, incorrect port numbers, has no backup server, is parked or the website doesn’t follow typical mail exchange setup standards.

Here are the reporting parameters of email verification after the above steps have been completed by an email list cleaning service (not in order and not all verification companies do these step by step):

Valid 250

The email passed all verification questions and is considered a true deliverable.

Hard Bounce 550
The email server was temporarily unable to deliver your message to the subscriber’s email address because the subscriber’s address does not exist.

General Bounce
The email server could not deliver your message, but the exchange could not determine a specific reason for the bounce. The bounce message from the subscriber’s server was widespread.

Soft Bounce
The email server was temporarily unable to deliver your message to the subscriber’s email address because of Internet outage, interruption and/or connection timeout issues.

Soft Bounce DNS Failure
The email server is temporarily unable to deliver your message to the subscriber’s email address because of a DNS connectivity issue or incorrect configuration.

Soft Bounce Mailbox Full
The email server is temporarily unable to deliver your message to the subscriber because the subscriber’s email box is full.

Soft Bounce Message Size Too Large
The email server could not deliver your message to the subscriber because the message size is too large.

Transient Bounce
The email server temporarily cannot deliver your message, but it is still trying.

Slow Response
The email server temporarily cannot deliver your message, but it is still trying.

Mail Block Relay Denied 551
Indicates that the subscriber’s email server is blocking email from our email server whether for spam or other reasons.

General Mail Block 550
Indicates that the subscriber’s email server is blocking email from our email server whether for spam or other reasons.

Mail Block Known Spammer
Indicates that the subscriber’s email server is blocking your email because it believes you are a spammer.

Mail Block Spam Detected 550
Indicates that the subscriber’s email server is blocking your email because the message appears to have content that looks like spam.

Auto Reply
An automatic response from the subscriber sent to your server, which could be out of office or a vacation message.

Forwarder
Report back any disconnected user, roaming or greeting card scenario (for example, a user can instruct Gmail to forward messages to a different email address. The sender is not necessarily aware of that) called “Forwarder”.

Bounce With No Email Address (BN)
Determined that the message was a bounce, but it could not resolve the original email recipient email address. False positive.

Mail Block Attachment Detected (MBAD)
Indicates that the subscriber’s email server is blocking email from your email server because the email message contained an attachment.

Mail Block – Relay Denied (MBRD) 551
Indicates that the subscriber’s email server is blocking email from your email server.

Challenge response spam filtering
Spam filter that automatically sends a reply with a challenge to the sender to perform some action to assure delivery of the original message.

List Server Replies (SMTP Replies)
A program that handles subscription requests for a mailing list and distributes new messages, newsletters, or other postings from the list’s members. (A list server should not be confused with a mail server, which handles incoming and outgoing e-mail for Internet users.)

Feedback Reports
A mailbox provider forwards the complaints originating from their users to the sender’s organizations.

False Positive 550
User account is not there, or they turned on/off a feature that allows for non-listed users to pass through.

Email verification companies will use their own code to determine the reporting above. At times, verification cannot get responses from the subscriber’s email server due to mail server configurations. Administrators make changes to their mail servers daily as they monitor traffic from the same source or ranges. They set alerts for anything suspicious especially when a range of IP’s are asking questions without sending responses. The email verification process is a delicate and expensive procedure if done right. In this case, you definitely get what you pay for.

James Carner is the premier private investigator of spam advisories. He held sales and marketing positions for software and telephony giants such as Epicor Software and Lucent Technologies in the 90’s, and for the past 25 years, James has serviced publishers and affiliates with email assistance, dynamic offers, targeted data, effective landing pages, form page leads and since 2009, has been exclusively performing real time API email list hygiene for select customers with eHygienics.com and Verify550.com

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