By Jennifer Nespola Lantz on Tuesday, 11 February 2025
Category: Email Strategy

Will Your Email Program Share the Same Fate as TikTok?

The US’s decision to ban TikTok (although it was given a temporary 75-day reprieve) took businesses, content creators, and users by surprise. Despite the warnings, many believed it wouldn’t happen. The impact led some content creators and consumers to other platforms, some remained at a loss. With all this said, downtime, be it a day or a lifetime, creates a significant burden for both businesses and consumers. 

Richelo Killian wrote an article titled “Would your business survive if your audience platform shuts down?” It’s a great question. What would happen to your business? Although he was referencing the TikTok ban, it could be any medium. Richelo suggests that if you have email in place, you could weather the storm.

Multichannel marketing is known to be a successful strategy for stronger ROI and brand awareness. Lauren Del Vecchio, Email Deliverability Manager from Yotpo, shared a case study about their client Mool, celebrating the success of growing their email list and ROI with the right combination and synergy of multichannel efforts. But what happens if one of those channels is shut down by local regulation, a technical issue, or by, gasp, human error?

Besides the ROI benefit, channel closure is another great reason to have multiple channels doing the work. Not to let a single platform be your only basket to hold your eggs, spreading your marketing across multiple sources to have redundancy for your program. To invest in sources you own and control and can protect.

So, what if you make email the foundation of your marketing strategy as Richolo suggests, would that protect you? Again, it seems like a lot of omelets cooking on one pan to me. Should that pan get knocked off the stove, nobody gets to eat.

Email isn’t impenetrable. What if email were to be shut down, even if only temporarily? Do you feel your business could weather the storm?

If email is the foundation of your online marketing, is there anything you can do to protect or prepare should that day come? Below I’ve listed out 8 areas of your program that could be vulnerable and questions you can ask yourself to begin building out plans and policies to protect it. And when you’re done with this list, keep researching as this is only a starting point.

8 Vulnerabilities for Email Marketing Programs

System Outages

Unfortunately, systems fail. It’s a part of technology and life. If you grew up with Windows, you’re painfully aware of the “blue screen of death”. Not every system is under your control, but that doesn’t mean you can’t have some control.

Technical Breaks

Sometimes something doesn’t get coded correctly and it breaks the functionality of the program sending the email or the email code is flawed to a point where the receivers refuse to accept it. A single DNS change or misunderstanding about a DNS entry can create collisions and break how an email works or the ability to send it.

Data Houses

Despite what they promise you, if you are purchasing or renting lists, you're bound to build a program resistant to delivery. Lists that aren’t yours are vulnerable to spam traps, complaints, and resounding signals to mailbox providers that your data is not consented and is of poor quality. Shutting down an email program isn’t just stopping it technically but keeping it from working. Being listed on a big blocklist or an internal blocklist at mailbox providers is enough to stop your program in its tracks.

Competitors

If you aren’t a unicorn in the space, you’re likely vying for the attention of potential customers against your competitors. Once you get that attention, you need to take care of it so that your competitors don’t swoop in and make your program irrelevant and unimpactful.

Account and Domain Compromise

Losing control of your system not only can stop your mail, but it can introduce extreme risk as your system can be used to spam those on your list OR the bad actor could introduce bad data into your system so they can spam. This not only harms those receiving the mail but harms the ESPs system and your brand’s reputation.

Data Compromise

Data is the backbone of online activity. Care for it like you would your own personal belongings. It’s your business's treasure chest. If it’s compromised, you’re looking at more than a PR nightmare, but a break in trust with your customer base, potentially putting them at risk as well. And compromised data can range from data theft to compromising the quality impacting what receivers see coming from your system.

Mailbox Providers

Yep, mailbox providers can be the bane of your existence and destroy your ability to mail. But I don’t believe I’ve ever seen it happen, at least not for senders following best practices. For senders I’ve worked with that struggle, it’s not that they are intentionally mailing against best practices, but they didn’t get set up correctly or know what the right thing was to do. If you plan to make email your main channel, treat it well and access resources that educate on best practices.

Your own actions

Digital faceplants are enough to stop your email program in its tracks.

Photo by Solen Feyissa on Unsplash

Leave Comments