How Do You Handle Mass Emailing in Google Workspace Without Getting Blocked?

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Asked By TechieGiraffe92 On

I'm curious about how teams manage mail merge and bulk email distributions from their individual corporate email accounts within Google Workspace. We have several teams who prefer to send mass emails directly from their personal work emails rather than using shared addresses or external services. I've heard that Google might block or flag entire domains for mass emailing, which makes me hesitant. Here are some specific questions I have:
- Do you restrict employees from using mail merge for their corporate email?
- Do you implement any sending limits, like a cap on the number of emails sent per minute or hour?
- Is there a daily limit for emails, such as 250 per day?
- Do you allow unrestricted access to email tools like YAMM and FormMule?
- Or do you require everyone to use dedicated email marketing services like Salesforce or Mailchimp instead?

2 Answers

Answered By EmailAficionado34 On

During this Christmas season, many folks want to send cheerful messages to everyone on their list. It's crucial to remember that even if they think it's a personal touch, any automated email format is essentially a bulk email. Major providers recognize this and treat it accordingly. If your team often needs to send these emails, it’s best to use a bulk emailing service that has the right features to make it feel personal while keeping your main corporate email locked down for compliance. That way, users can do what they need without risking your domain's reputation!

CheerfulSender99 -

Right? They can dress it up all they want, but it's still bulk email! Do you always keep it under tight control or allow some flexibility?

CuriousSparrow88 -

Exactly! I always remind my team it's mass marketing despite their good intentions.

Answered By MarketingPro2023 On

With Google Workspace, each account can send up to 1500 mail merge messages daily. If you’re planning to send over that limit, switching to a dedicated service is a must to avoid complications. For a little extra safeguard against spam risks, using a separate subdomain could help too.

ManagementGuru77 -

Wow, I hadn't realized about the 1500 limit. Would you feel comfortable letting your team hit that maximum regularly?

DataDrivenAlex -

That's interesting! It's great to know about that limit straight from the source.

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