{"id":1597,"date":"2025-09-04T11:00:00","date_gmt":"2025-09-04T11:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/internship.infoskaters.com\/blog\/2025\/09\/04\/spam-trigger-words-how-to-keep-your-emails-out-of-the-spam-folder\/"},"modified":"2025-09-04T11:00:00","modified_gmt":"2025-09-04T11:00:00","slug":"spam-trigger-words-how-to-keep-your-emails-out-of-the-spam-folder","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/internship.infoskaters.com\/blog\/2025\/09\/04\/spam-trigger-words-how-to-keep-your-emails-out-of-the-spam-folder\/","title":{"rendered":"Spam trigger words: How to keep your emails out of the spam folder"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Back in 2003, I was working with my first big consulting client, Hasbro. (Yes, <em>that<\/em> Hasbro. And yes, it was as fun as you&#8217;d imagine.) Sitting on my desk at the time \u2014 dog-eared, tea-stained, salsa-splotched \u2014 was a multi-page document I treated like sacred scripture: the spam trigger word list.<\/p>\n<p><a class=\"cta_button\" href=\"https:\/\/www.hubspot.com\/cs\/ci\/?pg=53e8428a-29a5-4225-a6ea-bca8ef991c19&amp;pid=53&amp;ecid=&amp;hseid=&amp;hsic=\"><\/a><\/p>\n<p>This wasn\u2019t just a list of naughty words. It came with spam <em>scores<\/em> \u2014 weights assigned to each phrase based on how likely it was to get your email flagged by filters. Before any copy went to the client for review, I\u2019d comb through every line of the message against that list, making sure we weren\u2019t setting off any content alarms.<\/p>\n<p>It was a pain in the neck, but it was necessary. Because back then, the majority of spam filters were content-based. One too many \u201cFrees\u201d or \u201cBuy Nows\u201d and boom \u2014 straight to the junk folder.<\/p>\n<p>I did similar work for Reed Scientific, and it was even trickier. Many of the words they <em>had<\/em> to use \u2014 clinical, technical terms \u2014 also showed up on the spammy list. They weren\u2019t being deceptive, but spam filters couldn\u2019t tell the difference between \u201clegitimate medical journal topic\u201d and a Nigerian prince scam. Which meant I spent a lot of time finding strategic workarounds for entirely innocent language.<\/p>\n<p>In this post, I\u2019ll go into more detail about spam trigger words \u2014 and how to avoid them.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Table of Contents<\/strong><\/p>\n<p> <a href=\"https:\/\/blog.hubspot.com\/blog\/tabid\/6307\/bid\/30684\/the-ultimate-list-of-email-spam-trigger-words.aspx#what-are-spam-trigger-words\">What are spam trigger words?<\/a><br \/>\n <a href=\"https:\/\/blog.hubspot.com\/blog\/tabid\/6307\/bid\/30684\/the-ultimate-list-of-email-spam-trigger-words.aspx#how-to-avoid-the-spam-folder\">How to Avoid the Spam Folder<\/a><br \/>\n <a href=\"https:\/\/blog.hubspot.com\/blog\/tabid\/6307\/bid\/30684\/the-ultimate-list-of-email-spam-trigger-words.aspx#spamming-examples\">Spamming Examples<\/a><br \/>\n <a href=\"https:\/\/blog.hubspot.com\/blog\/tabid\/6307\/bid\/30684\/the-ultimate-list-of-email-spam-trigger-words.aspx#spam-list-words-to-avoid-when-possible\">Spam List: Words to Avoid When Possible<\/a> <\/p>\n<p><a><\/a> <\/p>\n<p><a><\/a> <\/p>\n<h2>How to Avoid the Spam Folder<\/h2>\n<p>These days email spam filters are smarter (thankfully) than just looking at problem words. They look at authentication, sender reputation, and engagement, too. Here\u2019s what you need to do in all three areas to keep your messages going to the inbox, rather than the spam folder.<\/p>\n<h3>1. Confirm you have authentication in place.<\/h3>\n<p>Authentication isn\u2019t as difficult as it sounds, and it\u2019s the best place to start if your goal is to reach the inbox.<\/p>\n<p>Back in the early days of email, authentication was optional. Today, it\u2019s mandatory. Not just to avoid the spam folder, but to even <em>get considered<\/em> for inbox placement.<\/p>\n<p>Authentication is how you prove to mailbox providers that you are who you say you are \u2013 and that no one\u2019s pretending to be you. It\u2019s not about content or cadence; it\u2019s infrastructure. DNS records. Policies. Cryptographic signatures. Sounds difficult \u2013 but it\u2019s not.<\/p>\n<p>There are four main protocols you need to know: <strong>SPF<\/strong>, <strong>DKIM<\/strong>, <strong>DMARC<\/strong>, and <strong>BIMI<\/strong>. Each one plays a different role in helping you build trust with mailbox providers. The first three are required by all four of the major email inbox providers; BIMI is not (yet). Here\u2019s an overview:<\/p>\n\n<p>And here\u2019s a little more detail on each:<\/p>\n<h4>SPF: Your Email Bouncer<\/h4>\n<p><strong>Sender Policy Framework (SPF)<\/strong> tells mailbox providers which servers are authorized to send email on behalf of your domain. It\u2019s your way of saying, \u201cOnly these senders are allowed at the door.\u201d If an email shows up from your domain and it\u2019s <em>not<\/em> on the SPF list, red flags go up.<\/p>\n<p><strong>What to do:<\/strong>\u00a0Make sure your SPF record is up to date and includes <em>all<\/em> your legitimate senders \u2014 your ESP, your CRM, your support system, anyone sending on your behalf. <a href=\"https:\/\/knowledge.hubspot.com\/marketing-email\/overview-of-email-authentication\">Here\u2019s more detail<\/a>.<\/p>\n<h4>DKIM: The Tamper-Evident Seal<\/h4>\n<p><strong>DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM)<\/strong> adds a digital signature to each email, so the receiving server can verify that the message hasn\u2019t been altered in transit and that it came from you. Think of it as your wax seal on the envelope.<\/p>\n<p><strong>What to do:<\/strong>\u00a0Publish a public DKIM key in your DNS, and ensure your ESP is signing outgoing email with the matching private key. <a href=\"https:\/\/knowledge.hubspot.com\/marketing-email\/overview-of-email-authentication\">Here\u2019s more detail<\/a>.<\/p>\n<h4>DMARC: Your Inbox Policy<\/h4>\n<p><strong>Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting and Conformance (DMARC)<\/strong> is the protocol that ties it all together. It tells mailbox providers what to do if an email fails SPF and\/or DKIM, either monitor, quarantine, or reject that message.<\/p>\n<p><strong>What to do:<\/strong>\u00a0Start with p=none so you can monitor. But the long-term goal is p=quarantine or p=reject, because most major inbox providers (like Google and Yahoo) <em>require enforcement<\/em> for full trust and things like BIMI.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Bonus:<\/strong>\u00a0DMARC reports give you visibility into who\u2019s sending email from your domain. Sometimes you\u2019ll find unauthorized senders; sometimes you\u2019ll discover your own dev team forgot to authenticate something. <a href=\"https:\/\/knowledge.hubspot.com\/marketing-email\/overview-of-email-authentication\">Here\u2019s more detail<\/a>.<\/p>\n<h4>BIMI: Show Your Logo, If You\u2019ve Earned It<\/h4>\n<p><strong>Brand Indicators for Message Identification (BIMI)<\/strong> is where authentication meets branding. If you\u2019ve passed DMARC with enforcement and set up the right DNS records, BIMI lets your logo appear next to your emails in supported inboxes.<\/p>\n<p><strong>What to do:<\/strong>\u00a0Publish an SVG logo, set up a BIMI record, and if you&#8217;re sending to Gmail or Yahoo users, you\u2019ll also need a Verified Mark Certificate (VMC). Yes, that\u2019s a paid third-party certificate \u2014 welcome to enterprise email. <a href=\"https:\/\/knowledge.hubspot.com\/marketing-email\/use-bimi-to-display-your-verified-brand-logo-in-emails\">Here\u2019s more detail<\/a>.<\/p>\n<h4>Authentication: Final Words<\/h4>\n<p>All four protocols require DNS configuration. If that\u2019s not your lane, loop in your IT or dev team. But don\u2019t skip this step. Without proper authentication, you\u2019re starting every send with a deficit. Even your most beautiful, best-segmented campaign will be suspect if the infrastructure doesn\u2019t check out.<\/p>\n<p>And remember: <strong>passing authentication isn\u2019t a gold star<\/strong>, it\u2019s the baseline. You\u2019re not getting rewarded for doing it right, but you will be penalized if you don\u2019t.<\/p>\n<h3>2. Maintain a good sender reputation.<\/h3>\n<p>Once your authentication is squared away, the next big inbox gatekeeper is <strong>sender reputation<\/strong>. If authentication says <em>you are who you say you are<\/em>, reputation tells mailbox providers whether <em>you\u2019re someone worth trusting<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Think of it like a credit score, but for your domain or IP address. Have you been sending responsibly? Are people opening and clicking? Or are you racking up bounces, unsubscribes, and spam complaints?<\/p>\n<p>Mailbox providers track all of this. And they use it to decide whether your emails go to the inbox, the spam folder, or nowhere at all.<\/p>\n<h4>Check your score before you wreck your score.<\/h4>\n<p>There are a few ways to check your sender reputation. And none of them require guessing or vibes.<\/p>\n<p><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/senderscore.org\/assess\/get-your-score\/\">Sender Score by Validity<\/a>:<a href=\"https:\/\/senderscore.org\/assess\/get-your-score\/\"><\/a><\/strong>\u00a0A free tool that gives you a score between 0 and 100 based on your sending IP and\/or domain. Think of it as a general reputation report card. Anything above 80 is solid; below 70 and you might want to investigate. <\/p>\n<p><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/postmaster.google.com\/\">Google Postmaster Tools<\/a>:<\/strong>\u00a0If you\u2019re sending any real volume to Gmail users, this is a must. You\u2019ll see data on spam complaint rates, IP\/domain reputation, authentication status, and even delivery errors. But fair warning: You need to have DKIM and SPF set up and be sending at a consistent volume to access meaningful data. <\/p>\n<p><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/sendersupport.olc.protection.outlook.com\/snds\/\">Microsoft SNDS (Smart Network Data Services)<\/a>:<a href=\"https:\/\/senderscore.org\/assess\/get-your-score\/\"><\/a><\/strong>\u00a0It\u2019s not pretty, but it\u2019s useful \u2014 especially if your email isn\u2019t making it into Outlook or Hotmail inboxes. You\u2019ll get data on complaint rates, spam trap hits, and how Microsoft sees your IP\u2019s reputation. You\u2019ll need to register your IP(s) to gain access. <\/p>\n<p><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/www.talosintelligence.com\/\">Cisco Talos Intelligence<\/a>:<\/strong>\u00a0Offers reputation lookups for IP addresses and domains. This includes spam score, blacklist status, and email volume history. Great for a quick health check if something feels off. <\/p>\n<h4>Reputation Killers: A Non-Exhaustive, But Highly Relevant List<\/h4>\n<p>Even a well-intentioned sender can damage their rep. Here&#8217;s what to watch out for:<\/p>\n<p> High <strong>hard bounce<\/strong> rates (sending to invalid email addresses).<br \/>\n High <strong>spam complaint<\/strong> rates (Gmail considers anything above 0.1% as a red flag). <\/p>\n<p><strong>Sudden spikes<\/strong> in volume without warming up first.<br \/>\n Sending to <strong>purchased or scraped lists<\/strong> where there\u2019s no explicit opt-in permission (don\u2019t do it).<br \/>\n Ignoring lack of engagement; continuing to send to people who haven\u2019t opened in months (or ever). <\/p>\n<h4>The Fix: Warmth, Consistency, and Good Hygiene<\/h4>\n<p>There\u2019s no overnight fix for a damaged sender reputation, but you can turn things around with consistency and list hygiene.<\/p>\n<p> Gradually ramp up volume (especially after downtime or switching IPs).<br \/>\n Decrease frequency, remove, or suppress unengaged subscribers.<br \/>\n Make unsubscribing easy (yes, really).<br \/>\n Monitor complaints like it\u2019s your job. (Because \u2026 it kind of is.) <\/p>\n<p><strong>Bottom line:<\/strong>\u00a0Sender reputation is invisible until it starts hurting you. But once your emails start missing the inbox, it\u2019s the first place to look. Use the tools, check the metrics, and treat your domain reputation like the asset it is. Because mailbox providers certainly do.<\/p>\n<h3>3. Keep your readers engaging.<\/h3>\n<p>Engagement isn\u2019t just a nice-to-have anymore. For mailbox providers, it\u2019s a core signal, maybe <em>the<\/em> core signal, that your email is wanted, welcomed, and worth delivering to the inbox.<\/p>\n<p>Think of it from their perspective: If a recipient never opens your email, or worse, deletes it without reading or marks it as spam, why should they keep delivering your messages to the inbox? They\u2019re in the business of happy subscribers (your recipients), not senders with a quota (your organization).<\/p>\n<p>So yes, engagement matters. A lot.<\/p>\n<h4>What counts as \u201cengagement\u201d?<\/h4>\n<p>Short answer? Anything that signals interest.<\/p>\n<p>Things like:<\/p>\n<p><strong>Opens<\/strong> (Yes, even with Apple\u2019s MPP complicating things \u2026 more on that in a sec.) <\/p>\n<p><strong>Clicks<\/strong> (links, buttons, CTAs \u2014 these are gold) <\/p>\n<p><strong>Replies<\/strong> (especially for B2B senders or service emails) <\/p>\n<p><strong>Forwards or \u201cAdd to Address Book\u201d actions<\/strong> (a strong positive signal) <\/p>\n<p><strong>Marking messages as \u201cNot Spam\u201d<\/strong> (if your subscribers are recovering them from the junk folder) <\/p>\n<p>Mailbox providers are using this engagement data to make decisions about <em>future<\/em> delivery. So if your audience is tuned out, your future campaigns are more likely to skip the inbox \u2026 even if they\u2019re technically flawless.<\/p>\n<h4>But wait \u2026 What about Apple MPP?<\/h4>\n<p>Ah yes, <a href=\"https:\/\/emailopshop.com\/apples-mail-privacy-protection-the-sky-isnt-falling-after-all\/\">Apple\u2019s Mail Privacy Protection (MPP)<\/a>. Introduced in 2021, it pre-loads the tracking pixels that signal opens, which can artificially inflate open rates for recipients receiving your messages in Apple inboxes (like the native Mail app on iPhones). For most email marketers, this means that open rates have become a bit \u2026 fuzzy.<\/p>\n<p>Here\u2019s the thing. There\u2019s always been a margin of error in open rates, due to the use of tracking pixels. If a recipient reads an email once, or even 10 times, with images blocked, no open will be recorded. But if someone scrolls past an email with images enabled, and it appears in the preview pane of their inbox, it will register an open, even if they did not look at it.<\/p>\n<p>So they\u2019ve always been fuzzy, and now they are even fuzzier. But fuzzy doesn\u2019t mean useless. Opens can still be a directional indicator. A sudden decrease in open rates may mean you\u2019re not reaching the inbox (messages delivered to the spam folder or not delivered at all will not register an MPP open).<\/p>\n<p>Just don\u2019t assume opens are an absolute measure of who is and is not engaging with your email \u2013 they aren\u2019t and never were.<\/p>\n<h4>How to Track and Improve Engagement<\/h4>\n<p><strong>Watch trends<\/strong>, not just isolated metrics. Are opens declining across multiple sends? Are fewer people clicking your CTAs? That\u2019s worth investigating. <\/p>\n<p><strong>Segment by activity.<\/strong> Send re-engagement campaigns to lapsed subscribers. Lower the frequency on your inactive recipients. Send more frequent emails to your most active ones. <\/p>\n<p><strong>Clean your list regularly.<\/strong> If someone hasn\u2019t opened or clicked in 3-6 months (or whatever time frame makes sense for your cadence), decrease your send frequency. Maybe only send during your high seasons (for Hasbro that was pre-Chistmas, pre-Easter, and pre-Summer). You might even suppress or sunset them if they still continue not to engage, because sending to long-term unengaged recipients drags down your reputation. <\/p>\n<p><strong>Make your emails more engaging.<\/strong> I know. Obvious. But if your subject lines are vague, your CTAs are buried, or your content reads like a terms of service doc, you\u2019re not giving people much to engage with or click on. <\/p>\n<p><strong>Pro tip:<\/strong> If you\u2019re sending <em>only<\/em> promotional content, like discounts, sales, and offers, you\u2019re less likely to earn sustained engagement. Mix in value-based content like tips, insights, inspiration, and resources. Something worth reading, even when someone\u2019s not ready to buy.<\/p>\n\n<p><strong>Bottom line:<\/strong> Engagement is the clearest way to prove your emails are wanted; lack of engagement is the fastest way to get penalized when they\u2019re not. If you\u2019re ignoring this, inbox placement will eventually ignore <em>you<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><a><\/a> <\/p>\n<h2>Spamming Examples<\/h2>\n<p>Before CAN-SPAM was passed back in 2003, I worked for a large company that, like many at the time, was still figuring out how to run a commercial email program that didn\u2019t infuriate people.<\/p>\n<p>One day, customer service asked for a meeting. I was heading up the email program, and they were fielding a rising tide of calls from people who were upset about the emails we were sending. Not confused. Not curious. <em>Angry.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Apparently, someone (before I got there, thank you very much) had armed the team with a document titled <strong>\u201c10 Reasons the Emails We Send You Aren\u2019t Spam.\u201d<\/strong> I don\u2019t remember all 10, but here\u2019s the greatest hits:<\/p>\n<p> \u201cWe\u2019re a legitimate company.\u201d<br \/>\n \u201cYou have a business relationship with us.\u201d<br \/>\n \u201cWe only send emails that are of interest to you.\u201d<br \/>\n \u201cThis is a benefit to you.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>Customer service was told to read <em>all 10 points<\/em> to anyone who called in to complain. Only after they had gone through the list in its entirety were they allowed to unsubscribe someone from our emails.<\/p>\n<p>So I asked: How\u2019s that working for you?<\/p>\n<p>They said they rarely made it past item five. Most people got more agitated as the list went on, and many hung up <em>before<\/em> they got to the part where they were finally allowed to unsubscribe them. So, effective at keeping people on the list: yes. Effective at creating subscribers who welcomed our messages: no.<\/p>\n<h3>Spam is in the eye of the beholder.<\/h3>\n<p>That story may sound dated, but the dynamic behind it is still 100% relevant. <strong>Spam is often about perception, not policy.<\/strong> The legal definition of spam (from the U.S. CAN-SPAM Act) is email sent without meeting certain requirements: a working unsubscribe link, a physical mailing address, honest subject lines, no deception, and so on. It doesn\u2019t even require opt-in (though your deliverability team and inbox placement would really prefer that you get it).<\/p>\n<p>But for your recipients, defining spam is way simpler:<\/p>\n<p><strong>\u201cI didn\u2019t want this.\u201d<\/strong> <strong>\u201cI don\u2019t like this.\u201d<\/strong> <strong>\u201cWhy are they sending this to me again?\u201d<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Even if someone <em>did<\/em> opt in, and even if you\u2019re technically compliant, if they feel like your email is irrelevant, repetitive, pushy, or just plain annoying \u2026 they may mark it as spam anyway. And when they do, that hurts your sender reputation, inbox placement, and your ability to reach people who <em>do<\/em> want your messages.<\/p>\n<p>So yes, you should be compliant. But that\u2019s just the floor. What really matters is whether your email feels like spam <em>to<\/em> <em>your subscribers<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Because in 2025, permission doesn\u2019t guarantee attention \u2014 and compliance doesn\u2019t guarantee inboxing.<\/strong> Welcome to reality.<\/p>\n<p>So now, without further ado (or storytelling), here are some examples of what I consider spam from my own inbox.<\/p>\n<h3>The Phishing Scheme<\/h3>\n<p>This one\u2019s a head-scratcher, and a classic example of why \u201cspam\u201d is often in the eye of the beholder.<\/p>\n\n<p>Let\u2019s start with the obvious: my name isn\u2019t Jennifer. It\u2019s Jeanne. My middle and last names don\u2019t start with \u201cMs\u201d either. I don\u2019t have an account with EastWest Bank. And I don\u2019t live in the Philippines. In fact, I\u2019ve never even visited the Philippines.<\/p>\n<p>So why did I receive an apparently system-generated email confirming a 10,018 PHP ATM withdrawal, complete with masked card number and timestamp? Good question. This is most likely a phishing attempt. A fake transactional email trying to stir up panic and get me to call, click, or respond.<\/p>\n<p>It checks the classic phishing boxes: a plausible-looking format, real-world branding, and a vague call to action to \u201ccontact customer service.\u201d And yes, there\u2019s a disclaimer telling me <em>not<\/em> to reply to the email, which is usually code for \u201cdon\u2019t expect anyone to notice this is fake.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Spam? Absolutely. Whether or not this technically violates CAN-SPAM or was even sent to a purchased list doesn\u2019t really matter. It is irrelevant, misdirected, and sketchy. And if it walks like spam and quacks like spam \u2026 you know the rest.<\/p>\n<h3>The \u201cAll About Us\u201d Newsletter<\/h3>\n<p>I get way too many of these. The B2B newsletter below landed in my inbox and featured the organization mentioning its own name <em>thirteen times<\/em> in a single message. I\u2019ve covered each instance with a red box, to protect the identity of the organization.<\/p>\n\n<p>The entire email was the organization talking about <em>itself<\/em>. Its awards, its milestones, its latest press release \u2026 without any clear reason why I, the reader, should care. The only potential value-add, a link to a white paper, was buried at the very bottom.<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s a textbook \u201cAll About Us\u201d newsletter: no hook, no reader benefit, and no attempt to make the content relevant to the recipient. It\u2019s also a missed opportunity to engage, and a good reminder that your emails should <em>feel<\/em> like they\u2019re for your audience, not just about your organization or for your CEO.<\/p>\n<p>Are they a legitimate company? I think so. Is their newsletter effective? No. Did I opt-in? Maybe. I do know who they are and I have spoken to people there. Can it be fixed? Yes \u2013 here are <a href=\"https:\/\/emailopshop.com\/can-this-b2b-newsletter-be-improved-yes-from-my-inbox\/\">my recommendations<\/a>. Is it spam? Technically no, but realistically? Probably yes.<\/p>\n<h3>The Frequency Issue<\/h3>\n<p>Even valuable content can start to feel like spam when it shows up <em>too often<\/em>. Frequency on its own isn\u2019t inherently bad. Daily emails can work, if your audience wants them. But when the cadence is out of sync with recipient expectations, even well-crafted, on-brand messages can start to feel like inbox clutter.<\/p>\n<p>Take the example below. Although the <a href=\"https:\/\/blog.hubspot.com\/marketing\/email-design\">friendly from addresses<\/a> are different, all are from Groupon (see the link in the preheader text). And all have the same subject line.<\/p>\n\n<p>I received 133 emails in a single month from Groupon, a brand I\u2019ve purchased from exactly once in the last year. That\u2019s 4.3 emails per day. And most of them (58%) had the <em>exact same subject line (the one above)<\/em>. It wasn\u2019t malicious. It wasn\u2019t deceptive. But it was excessive. And after a while, I stopped noticing the messages altogether.<\/p>\n<p>That kind of repetition, especially in the subject line, can train recipients to tune out. If every subject line looks the same, they\u2019ll assume the content is the same too (even if it isn\u2019t) and start skipping or deleting without opening. And once that pattern sets in, engagement drops \u2026 and your deliverability may follow.<\/p>\n<p>Here\u2019s the thing: Volume isn\u2019t strategy. Frequency needs to be intentional and aligned with actual subscriber behavior. Otherwise, even \u201cgood\u201d emails that are compliant, relevant, and promotional (or not), can become indistinguishable from spam in your recipient\u2019s eyes. And when that happens, they may not just ignore it. They might actively <em>report<\/em> it.<\/p>\n<p>Check out the <a href=\"https:\/\/emailopshop.com\/email_frequency\/\">blog post this<\/a> <a href=\"https:\/\/emailopshop.com\/email_frequency\/\">experience drove me to write<\/a> to learn more.<\/p>\n<p><a><\/a> <\/p>\n<h2>Spam List: Words to Avoid When Possible<\/h2>\n<p>As I said, some words and phrases are easier to avoid than others. At the very least, you&#8217;ll want to ensure you use some of these only if you absolutely need to and as little as possible.<\/p>\n<h3><strong>Commerce<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> As seen on<br \/>\n Buy<br \/>\n Buy direct<br \/>\n Buying judgments<br \/>\n Clearance<br \/>\n Order<br \/>\n Order status<br \/>\n Orders shipped by shopper <\/p>\n<h3><strong>Personal<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> Dig up dirt on friends<br \/>\n Meet singles<br \/>\n Score with babes<br \/>\n XXX<br \/>\n Near you <\/p>\n<h3><strong>Employment<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> Additional income<br \/>\n Be your own boss<br \/>\n Compete for your business<br \/>\n Double your<br \/>\n Earn $<br \/>\n Earn extra cash<br \/>\n Earn per week<br \/>\n Expect to earn<br \/>\n Extra income<br \/>\n Home-based<br \/>\n Home employment<br \/>\n Home-based business<br \/>\n Income from home<br \/>\n Make $<br \/>\n Make money<br \/>\n Money making<br \/>\n Online biz opportunity<br \/>\n Online degree<br \/>\n Opportunity<br \/>\n Potential earnings<br \/>\n University diplomas<br \/>\n While you sleep<br \/>\n Work at home<br \/>\n Work from home <\/p>\n<h3><strong>Financial &#8211; General<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> $$$<br \/>\n Affordable<br \/>\n Bargain<br \/>\n Beneficiary<br \/>\n Best price<br \/>\n Big bucks<br \/>\n Cash<br \/>\n Cash bonus<br \/>\n Cashcashcash<br \/>\n Cents on the dollar<br \/>\n Cheap<br \/>\n Check<br \/>\n Claims<br \/>\n Collect<br \/>\n Compare rates<br \/>\n Cost<br \/>\n Credit<br \/>\n Credit bureaus<br \/>\n Discount<br \/>\n Earn<br \/>\n Easy terms<br \/>\n F r e e<br \/>\n Fast cash<br \/>\n For just $XXX<br \/>\n Hidden assets<br \/>\n hidden charges<br \/>\n Income<br \/>\n Incredible deal<br \/>\n Insurance<br \/>\n Investment<br \/>\n Loans<br \/>\n Lowest price<br \/>\n Million dollars<br \/>\n Money<br \/>\n Money back<br \/>\n Mortgage<br \/>\n Mortgage rates<br \/>\n No cost<br \/>\n No fees<br \/>\n One hundred percent free<br \/>\n Only $<br \/>\n Pennies a day<br \/>\n Price<br \/>\n Profits<br \/>\n Pure profit<br \/>\n Quote<br \/>\n Refinance<br \/>\n Save $<br \/>\n Save big money<br \/>\n Save up to<br \/>\n Serious cash<br \/>\n Subject to credit<br \/>\n They keep your money \u2014 no refund!<br \/>\n Unsecured credit<br \/>\n Unsecured debt<br \/>\n US dollars<br \/>\n Why pay more? <\/p>\n<h3><strong>Financial &#8211; Business<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> Accept credit cards<br \/>\n Cards accepted<br \/>\n Check or money order<br \/>\n Credit card offers<br \/>\n Explode your business<br \/>\n Full refund<br \/>\n Investment decision<br \/>\n No credit check<br \/>\n No hidden Costs<br \/>\n No investment<br \/>\n Requires initial investment<br \/>\n Sent in compliance<br \/>\n Stock alert<br \/>\n Stock disclaimer statement<br \/>\n Stock pick <\/p>\n<h3><strong>Financial &#8211; Personal<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> Avoid bankruptcy<br \/>\n Calling creditors<br \/>\n Collect child support<br \/>\n Consolidate debt and credit<br \/>\n Consolidate your debt<br \/>\n Eliminate bad credit<br \/>\n Eliminate debt<br \/>\n Financially independent<br \/>\n Get out of debt<br \/>\n Get paid<br \/>\n Lower interest rate<br \/>\n Lower monthly payment<br \/>\n Lower your mortgage rate<br \/>\n Lowest insurance rates<br \/>\n Pre-approved<br \/>\n Refinance home<br \/>\n Social security number<br \/>\n Your income <\/p>\n<h3><strong>General<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> Acceptance<br \/>\n Accordingly<br \/>\n Avoid<br \/>\n Chance<br \/>\n Dormant<br \/>\n Freedom<br \/>\n Here<br \/>\n Hidden<br \/>\n Home<br \/>\n Leave<br \/>\n Lifetime<br \/>\n Lose<br \/>\n Maintained<br \/>\n Medium<br \/>\n Miracle<br \/>\n Never<br \/>\n Passwords<br \/>\n Problem<br \/>\n Remove<br \/>\n Reverses<br \/>\n Sample<br \/>\n Satisfaction<br \/>\n Solution<br \/>\n Stop<br \/>\n Success<br \/>\n Teen<br \/>\n Wife <\/p>\n<h3><strong>Greetings<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> Dear [email\/friend\/somebody]<br \/>\n Friend<br \/>\n Hello <\/p>\n<h3><strong>Marketing<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> Ad<br \/>\n Auto email removal<br \/>\n Bulk email<br \/>\n Click<br \/>\n Click below<br \/>\n Click here<br \/>\n Click to remove<br \/>\n Direct email<br \/>\n Direct marketing<br \/>\n Email harvest<br \/>\n Email marketing<br \/>\n Form<br \/>\n Increase sales<br \/>\n Increase traffic<br \/>\n Increase your sales<br \/>\n Increase visibility<br \/>\n Internet market<br \/>\n Internet marketing<br \/>\n Marketing<br \/>\n Marketing solutions<br \/>\n Mass email<br \/>\n Member<br \/>\n Month trial offer<br \/>\n More Internet Traffic<br \/>\n Multi-level marketing<br \/>\n Not spam<br \/>\n One time mailing<br \/>\n Online marketing<br \/>\n Open<br \/>\n Opt-in<br \/>\n Performance<br \/>\n Removal instructions<br \/>\n Sale<br \/>\n Sales<br \/>\n Search engine listings<br \/>\n Search engines<br \/>\n Subscribe<br \/>\n The following form<br \/>\n This isn&#8217;t junk<br \/>\n This isn&#8217;t spam<br \/>\n Undisclosed recipient<br \/>\n Unsubscribe<br \/>\n Visit our website<br \/>\n We hate spam<br \/>\n Web traffic<br \/>\n Will not believe your eyes <\/p>\n<h3><strong>Medical<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> Cures baldness<br \/>\n Diagnostic<br \/>\n Fast Viagra delivery<br \/>\n Human growth hormone<br \/>\n Life insurance<br \/>\n Lose weight<br \/>\n Lose weight spam<br \/>\n Medicine<br \/>\n No medical exams<br \/>\n Online pharmacy<br \/>\n Removes wrinkles<br \/>\n Reverses aging<br \/>\n Stop snoring<br \/>\n Valium<br \/>\n Viagra<br \/>\n Vicodin<br \/>\n Weight loss<br \/>\n Xanax <\/p>\n<h3><strong>Numbers<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> #1<br \/>\n 100% free<br \/>\n 100% satisfied<br \/>\n 4U<br \/>\n 50% off<br \/>\n Billion<br \/>\n Billion dollars<br \/>\n Join millions<br \/>\n Join millions of Americans<br \/>\n Million<br \/>\n One hundred percent guaranteed<br \/>\n Thousands <\/p>\n<h3><strong>Offers<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> Being a member<br \/>\n Billing address<br \/>\n Call<br \/>\n Cannot be combined with any other offer<br \/>\n Confidentially on all orders<br \/>\n Deal<br \/>\n Financial freedom<br \/>\n Gift certificate<br \/>\n Giving away<br \/>\n Guarantee<br \/>\n Have you been turned down?<br \/>\n If only it were that easy<br \/>\n Important information regarding<br \/>\n In accordance with laws<br \/>\n Long-distance phone offer<br \/>\n Mail in order form<br \/>\n Message contains<br \/>\n Name brand<br \/>\n Nigerian<br \/>\n No age restrictions<br \/>\n No catch<br \/>\n No claim forms<br \/>\n No disappointment<br \/>\n No experience<br \/>\n No gimmick<br \/>\n No inventory<br \/>\n No middleman<br \/>\n No obligation<br \/>\n No purchase necessary<br \/>\n No questions asked<br \/>\n No selling<br \/>\n No strings attached<br \/>\n No-obligation<br \/>\n Not intended<br \/>\n Obligation<br \/>\n Offshore<br \/>\n Offer<br \/>\n Per day<br \/>\n Per week<br \/>\n Priority mail<br \/>\n Prize<br \/>\n Prizes<br \/>\n Produced and sent out<br \/>\n Reserves the right<br \/>\n Shopping spree<br \/>\n Stuff on sale<br \/>\n Terms and conditions<br \/>\n The best rates<br \/>\n They\u2019re just giving it away<br \/>\n Trial<br \/>\n Unlimited<br \/>\n Unsolicited<br \/>\n Vacation<br \/>\n Vacation offers<br \/>\n Warranty<br \/>\n We honor all<br \/>\n Weekend getaway<br \/>\n What are you waiting for?<br \/>\n Who really wins?<br \/>\n Win<br \/>\n Winner<br \/>\n Winning<br \/>\n Won<br \/>\n You are a winner!<br \/>\n You have been selected<br \/>\n You\u2019re a Winner! <\/p>\n<h3><strong>Calls-to-Action<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> Cancel at any time<br \/>\n Compare<br \/>\n Copy accurately<br \/>\n Get<br \/>\n Give it away<br \/>\n Print form signature<br \/>\n Print out and fax<br \/>\n See for yourself<br \/>\n Sign up free today <\/p>\n<h3><strong>Free<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> Free<br \/>\n Free access<br \/>\n Free cell phone<br \/>\n Free consultation<br \/>\n Free DVD<br \/>\n Free gift<br \/>\n Free grant money<br \/>\n Free hosting<br \/>\n Free installation<br \/>\n Free Instant<br \/>\n Free investment<br \/>\n Free leads<br \/>\n Free membership<br \/>\n Free money<br \/>\n Free offer<br \/>\n Free preview<br \/>\n Free priority mail<br \/>\n Free quote<br \/>\n Free sample<br \/>\n Free trial<br \/>\n Free website <\/p>\n<h3><strong>Descriptions\/Adjectives<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> All natural<br \/>\n All new<br \/>\n Amazing<br \/>\n Certified<br \/>\n Congratulations<br \/>\n Drastically reduced<br \/>\n Fantastic deal<br \/>\n For free<br \/>\n Guaranteed<br \/>\n It\u2019s effective<br \/>\n Outstanding values<br \/>\n Promise you<br \/>\n Real thing<br \/>\n Risk free<br \/>\n Satisfaction guaranteed <\/p>\n<h3><strong>Sense of Urgency<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> Access<br \/>\n Act now!<br \/>\n Apply now<br \/>\n Apply online<br \/>\n Call free<br \/>\n Call now<br \/>\n Can&#8217;t live without<br \/>\n Do it today<br \/>\n Don&#8217;t delete<br \/>\n Don&#8217;t hesitate<br \/>\n For instant access<br \/>\n For Only<br \/>\n For you<br \/>\n Get it now<br \/>\n Get started now<br \/>\n Great offer<br \/>\n Info you requested<br \/>\n Information you requested<br \/>\n Instant<br \/>\n Limited time<br \/>\n New customers only<br \/>\n Now<br \/>\n Now only<br \/>\n Offer expires<br \/>\n Once in lifetime<br \/>\n One time<br \/>\n Only<br \/>\n Order now<br \/>\n Order today<br \/>\n Please read<br \/>\n Special promotion<br \/>\n Supplies are limited<br \/>\n Take action now<br \/>\n Time limited<br \/>\n Urgent<br \/>\n While supplies last <\/p>\n<h3><strong>Nouns<\/strong><\/h3>\n<p> Addresses on CD<br \/>\n Beverage<br \/>\n Bonus<br \/>\n Brand new pager<br \/>\n Cable converter<br \/>\n Casino<br \/>\n Celebrity<br \/>\n Copy DVDs<br \/>\n Laser printer<br \/>\n Legal<br \/>\n Luxury car<br \/>\n New domain extensions<br \/>\n Phone<br \/>\n Rolex<br \/>\n Stainless steel <\/p>\n<h2>Your Brand Reputation: The Big Picture<\/h2>\n<p>At one time, avoiding the spam folder felt like a math problem. You had your trusty list of spam trigger words, a little scoring system, and a decent chance of landing in the inbox if you followed the rules. (Simpler times, honestly.)<\/p>\n<p>But today, getting your email delivered and opened isn\u2019t just about content. It\u2019s about <strong>reputation<\/strong>. And not just your <em>sender<\/em> reputation, but your <em>brand<\/em> reputation.<\/p>\n<p>For many people, your email and website may be the only interaction they ever have with your organization. That online experience \u2014 along with your social content, SMS messages, and even your paid advertising \u2014 shapes their perception of your brand. If your communications feel unwanted, repetitive, irrelevant, or disruptive, you\u2019re not just risking a spam complaint. You\u2019re risking your credibility.<\/p>\n<p>This is why engagement and deliverability are so closely linked. When people engage with your emails, it signals trust. When they ignore, delete, or mark them as spam, it erodes that trust, both with the recipient and with mailbox providers watching those behaviors in aggregate.<\/p>\n<p>Whether you&#8217;re emailing prospects, customers, donors, volunteers, or anyone else in your audience, it comes down to <strong>relationship and relevance<\/strong>. Are you showing up in ways that are useful, welcome, and aligned with their expectations? If not, no amount of clever copy or compliant sending is going to save your placement.<\/p>\n<p>The good news? Building that relationship benefits everything, not just deliverability. It improves click-through rates, conversions, loyalty, and long-term impact. And yes, it keeps your brand where it belongs: in the inbox, not the junk folder.<\/p>\n<p><span>Editor&#8217;s note: This article was originally published March\u00a02013\u00a0and has since been updated for comprehensiveness.<\/span><\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Back in 2003, I was working with my first big consulting client, Hasbro. (Yes, that [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":0,"featured_media":1598,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1597","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/internship.infoskaters.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1597","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/internship.infoskaters.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/internship.infoskaters.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/internship.infoskaters.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1597"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/internship.infoskaters.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1597\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/internship.infoskaters.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/1598"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/internship.infoskaters.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1597"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/internship.infoskaters.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1597"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/internship.infoskaters.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1597"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}