Sudden increase in soft bounces

Options
In March we had noticeably higher rates of soft bounces than in previous months. Is there a way to run a report to see soft bounces with specific email providers? I would also be interested in any other insight on what could cause a sudden jump in soft bounces. 
Tagged:

Comments

  • Gwendolyn Chambers:

    In March we had noticeably higher rates of soft bounces than in previous months. Is there a way to run a report to see soft bounces with specific email providers? I would also be interested in any other insight on what could cause a sudden jump in soft bounces. 

    Gwendolyn,


    There are reporter writer reports that allow you to see email message performance by domain.  If you select or filter by soft bounces this will get you closer to what you are looking for in terms of soft bounces with email providers.  If not, then there is always a custom report can be created within our services team for your site.


    As for soft bounces, there are a couple of different reasons an email can soft bounce.
    • Mailbox is full (over quota).
    • Recipient email server is down or offline.
    • Email message is too large.
     Just know that soft bounces are indicative of a deliverability problem and consistently targeting soft bounces could possibly cause issues if there's an IP block or something else like their inbox is full which over time could hurt your sender reputation.

     

  • Ryan O'Keefe:

    Gwendolyn Chambers:

    In March we had noticeably higher rates of soft bounces than in previous months. Is there a way to run a report to see soft bounces with specific email providers? I would also be interested in any other insight on what could cause a sudden jump in soft bounces. 

    Gwendolyn,


    There are reporter writer reports that allow you to see email message performance by domain.  If you select or filter by soft bounces this will get you closer to what you are looking for in terms of soft bounces with email providers.  If not, then there is always a custom report can be created within our services team for your site.


    As for soft bounces, there are a couple of different reasons an email can soft bounce.
    • Mailbox is full (over quota).
    • Recipient email server is down or offline.
    • Email message is too large.
    Just know that after a couple of soft bounces an email will turn into a hard bounce and no longer will be delivered as it could hurt your sender reputation sending to a known email address that is bad.

     

     

    Thank you, the domain report is helpful. It appears that the majority of soft bouces were coming from Earthlink.net. Maybe they were having issues. I'll keep an eye on it.

    Thanks!

  • Gwendolyn Chambers:

    Ryan O'Keefe:

    Gwendolyn Chambers:

    In March we had noticeably higher rates of soft bounces than in previous months. Is there a way to run a report to see soft bounces with specific email providers? I would also be interested in any other insight on what could cause a sudden jump in soft bounces. 

    Gwendolyn,


    There are reporter writer reports that allow you to see email message performance by domain.  If you select or filter by soft bounces this will get you closer to what you are looking for in terms of soft bounces with email providers.  If not, then there is always a custom report can be created within our services team for your site.


    As for soft bounces, there are a couple of different reasons an email can soft bounce.
    • Mailbox is full (over quota).
    • Recipient email server is down or offline.
    • Email message is too large.
    Just know that soft bounces are indicative of a deliverability problem and consistently targeting soft bounces could possibly cause issues if there's an IP block or something else like server issues which over time could hurt your sender reputation.

     

     

    Thank you, the domain report is helpful. It appears that the majority of soft bouces were coming from Earthlink.net. Maybe they were having issues. I'll keep an eye on it.

    Thanks!

     

    I do want to clear up the confusion around soft bounces and hard bounces.  Soft bounces are definitely indicative of a deliverability problem, but they aren't rolled over to hard bounces.  You should definitely evaluate internal processes for retrying soft bounces as continual retries over several months with no engagement would not be beneficial to your sender reputation.

  • Ryan O'Keefe:

    Gwendolyn Chambers:

    Ryan O'Keefe:

    Gwendolyn Chambers:

    In March we had noticeably higher rates of soft bounces than in previous months. Is there a way to run a report to see soft bounces with specific email providers? I would also be interested in any other insight on what could cause a sudden jump in soft bounces. 

    Gwendolyn,


    There are reporter writer reports that allow you to see email message performance by domain.  If you select or filter by soft bounces this will get you closer to what you are looking for in terms of soft bounces with email providers.  If not, then there is always a custom report can be created within our services team for your site.


    As for soft bounces, there are a couple of different reasons an email can soft bounce.
    • Mailbox is full (over quota).
    • Recipient email server is down or offline.
    • Email message is too large.
    Just know that soft bounces are indicative of a deliverability problem and consistently targeting soft bounces could possibly cause issues if there's an IP block or something else like server issues which over time could hurt your sender reputation.

     

     

    Thank you, the domain report is helpful. It appears that the majority of soft bouces were coming from Earthlink.net. Maybe they were having issues. I'll keep an eye on it.

    Thanks!

     

    I do want to clear up the confusion around soft bounces and hard bounces.  Soft bounces are definitely indicative of a deliverability problem, but they aren't rolled over to hard bounces.  You should definitely evaluate internal processes for retrying soft bounces as continual retries over several months with no engagement would not be beneficial to your sender reputation.

     

     How does one evaluate internal proceses for retrying soft bounces? Our unsubscribe rate seems to have leveled off a bit. What is a normal rate generally? 

     

  • Gwendolyn Chambers:

    Ryan O'Keefe:

    Gwendolyn Chambers:

    Ryan O'Keefe:

    Gwendolyn Chambers:

    In March we had noticeably higher rates of soft bounces than in previous months. Is there a way to run a report to see soft bounces with specific email providers? I would also be interested in any other insight on what could cause a sudden jump in soft bounces. 

    Gwendolyn,


    There are reporter writer reports that allow you to see email message performance by domain.  If you select or filter by soft bounces this will get you closer to what you are looking for in terms of soft bounces with email providers.  If not, then there is always a custom report can be created within our services team for your site.


    As for soft bounces, there are a couple of different reasons an email can soft bounce.
    • Mailbox is full (over quota).
    • Recipient email server is down or offline.
    • Email message is too large.
    Just know that soft bounces are indicative of a deliverability problem and consistently targeting soft bounces could possibly cause issues if there's an IP block or something else like server issues which over time could hurt your sender reputation.

     

     

    Thank you, the domain report is helpful. It appears that the majority of soft bouces were coming from Earthlink.net. Maybe they were having issues. I'll keep an eye on it.

    Thanks!

     

    I do want to clear up the confusion around soft bounces and hard bounces.  Soft bounces are definitely indicative of a deliverability problem, but they aren't rolled over to hard bounces.  You should definitely evaluate internal processes for retrying soft bounces as continual retries over several months with no engagement would not be beneficial to your sender reputation.

     

     How does one evaluate internal proceses for retrying soft bounces? Our unsubscribe rate seems to have leveled off a bit. What is a normal rate generally? 

     

     

    You should be tracking engagement through each one of your campaigns and if possible using engagement factors to see who is opening and taking action.  This will help you determine who you need to suppress or remove because they are not engaged.  Some Blackbaud products have a default of 3 consecutive soft bounces and then they start suppressing those email addresses.  This number should be determined based upon your volume and frequency at which you send. 


     

Categories