Why ”No Reply” Emails Have no Place in Email Marketing & how to Replace them

Managing your email communications with customers can be a delicate balancing act. On the one hand, you want to ensure that customers are receiving important information and updates about your business, and on the other, you don’t want to annoy them and tarnish your reputation.

Which is why it is so baffling that so many businesses, even big corporations, continue to persist in using no reply emails. The no reply email might sound like a reasonable idea, but it is anathema to a sustainable email marketing strategy.

Why ''No reply'' Emails have no Place in Email Marketing and How to replace them

What is a ‘No Reply’ Email?

You have probably received loads of no reply emails over the years, even if you aren’t aware of it. These are the emails that businesses send out from addresses in the format of ‘noreply@business.com’, or, ‘dontreply@corporation.org’. The purpose of using these accounts is to discourage users from replying to an automated account and becoming frustrated at the lack of a response from the business.

While this might seem like a good idea on the surface, there are actually a number of reasons why you should avoid using no reply emails today. These should be seen as a relic of a bygone era – something we used in lieu of any better alternatives. Today, things are very different. No reply emails aren’t just unhelpful, they are counterproductive.

Why Your Customers Don’t Want Them

As a general rule, you want to send your customers as few emails as possible. We’re not saying that you shouldn’t send them emails at all – obviously, there are plenty of situations where it is appropriate to email. However, you should always aim to send the smallest number possible. Bombarding people with emails will work on a small percentage but it will actively annoy a much larger percentage. Entrepreneur.com have a great article that goes into more detail about how often you should be sending marketing emails.

When you do email your customers, you should be emailing them with carefully crafted messages. Every piece of correspondence from you to your customers should be composed with confidence – confidence that it is a worthwhile piece of communication, not a low-effort attempt at generating a few sales.

The no reply email address makes one thing clear to your customers straight away – you aren’t interested in what they have to say. Your business should always be open to feedback and you will gain a lot more trust and respect from your customers if you can show them that you are always willing to listen to their criticisms and concerns.

You could even use the fact that you don’t use no reply emails and manually monitor the email addresses that you do use as a powerful marketing message. Your audience may well feel more inclined to sign up for your email alerts and newsletters if they know that you are prepared to receive a response to them. Otherwise, it is a strictly one-way communications channel.

Related: Mastering Email marketing

Why They’re Bad for Business

Using a no reply email today harms your business’s brand and tarnishes your reputation. We’ve covered the secrets of a successful email marketing campaign before. One of the points we made then was that you should put yourself in the recipient’s shoes. Do this with no reply emails and you will understand why.

A no reply email address is the kind of thing that your audience will associate with an uncaring, faceless corporation. Your audience doesn’t want to feel like their only contact with you is entirely automated.

Many people will also set up filters on their email inbox so that any emails from a no reply email address are automatically discarded. Once this happens, your communications line with your customer is essentially dead. If you do need to contact them in the future, your no reply email will be useless.

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The end result of this – a reduction in deliverability at the same time as damage to your brand – can have serious consequences for the long-term viability of your mailing list. If you are already using a no reply email, then we strongly advise you to bite the bullet and ditch it now – you’ll end up doing it sooner or later anyway.

Email marketing

Better Alternatives

If none of that convinces you, the fact that we now have much better alternatives should do the trick. Setting up a new email address is so quick and simple that it’s hard to identify the advantage of using a no reply account. Creating a specific account for your customer communications is a good idea; your customers will appreciate having all of your communications coming from a single source.

Email management software is much more sophisticated than it used to be, and it is now easy to set up filters that can organize your emails, and even identify messages suitable for an automated response.

Perhaps the most damming evidence of all, though, is that experienced email marketing firms like Sendinblue clearly have no faith in the no reply email concept. Sendinblue produces a number of renowned email marketing tools, and they know what they’re talking about. The aforementioned article is a damning assessment of a hopelessly outdated idea.

There’s no discernible advantage to a business today deciding to use no reply email addresses. Creating dedicated email addresses for the different parts of your business is quick, simple, and free. You should always be open to customer feedback, not telling them you don’t care.

 

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Comments

11 responses to “Why ”No Reply” Emails Have no Place in Email Marketing & how to Replace them”

  1. […] Related: Why ”No Reply” Emails Have no Place in Email Marketing & how to Replace them […]

  2. I honestly can’t understand why so many businesses are still using this approach in their email marketing. Every time I receive a no reply email, it makes me roll my eyes. Customers want to feel appreciated and heard, like you actually care about the problems in their life that your product or service are solving – not like you just see them as money in the bank, another faceless number.

    1. True, ”no reply” emails fail to connect with the audience. I think businesses should avoid them altogether.

  3. “Which is why it is so baffling that so many businesses, even big corporations, continue to persist in using no reply emails. The no reply email might sound like a reasonable idea, but it is anathema to a sustainable email marketing strategy.” Totally agree! And it seems like it’s really hard to find “just who” you’re supposed to try and reach out to, since they typically don’t make it obvious in their “no reply” email.

    1. Hi Brad, true, it is high time businesses do a way this kind of email marketing which in my opinion isn’t the best way to communicate with your potential or actual customers.

  4. Amen to this! I’m particularly baffled at all government offices using no-reply e-mails when they answer to a question I’ve asked of them. What if their answer to my question isn’t sufficient (which is usually the case), how am I supposed to get further information? No-reply e-mails have absolutely no function in 2020.

    1. True Teresa, I totally agree with your insighful feedback. Thanks.

  5. This is so true! It’s one reason why I don’t really have a newsletter. People get so many emails that they just delete, I’d rather only send email when necessary.

    1. Hi, thanks for reading and commenting on this post. You are most welcomed.

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