Knowledge Hub

38.3.2 Email Masking – Domain Reputation and Deliverability


Overview #

When using a masked email address to send from your own domain, deliverability doesn’t just depend on the content of your email – it also depends on the reputation of your domain.

Email providers like Gmail, Outlook, and Yahoo track how your domain behaves over time. A good reputation improves your inbox placement. A poor one can land you in spam, or even block your emails entirely.

What is Domain Reputation? #

Your domain reputation is like a credit score for email. It’s based on how trustworthy and consistent your domain has been when sending emails over time.

Email providers monitor:

  • How often your emails are opened or clicked
  • How many are deleted without being opened
  • If users report your messages as spam
  • Whether your domain has been used for spam or phishing in the past
  • Technical settings like SPF, DKIM, and DMARC

Why It Matters for Masked Sending #

When you use email masking, you’re asking platforms like Gmail to trust that you’re legitimately sending from your domain – even though the technical sender is a third party (our platform, via AWS SES).

If your domain doesn’t already have a good reputation, or is brand new, it may take time to build trust. Sending too much too soon from a fresh domain can hurt your standing from the start.

Use a Domain That’s Already Established #

Domain AgeRisk LevelRecommendation
🆕 Less than 1 monthHigh riskAvoid using brand-new domains unless absolutely necessary
🟡 1 to 6 monthsModerateUse with caution, send slowly and build up over time
✅ 6+ monthsLow riskBest option, especially if the domain has a history of legitimate use

How to Build and Protect Domain Reputation #

TipWhy It Helps
📬 Start smallSend a small batch of emails first, then gradually increase volume
📊 Monitor engagementFocus on sending emails people open and interact with
🧹 Keep your list cleanAvoid sending to invalid or unengaged addresses
🚫 Avoid spammy contentDon’t use misleading subject lines, overuse images, or use too many salesy keywords
📧 Use real reply-to addressesDon’t hide behind no-reply – it lowers trust
🧪 Test your emailsSend test messages to yourself and check where they land (inbox vs spam)
🔄 Keep a consistent sending scheduleAvoid large, unpredictable spikes in activity

Tools to Check Your Domain Reputation #

While reputation scores aren’t always publicly visible, here are some tools that can help:

  • Google Postmaster Tools – Great for Gmail deliverability insights
  • MXToolbox – Useful for DNS checks and blacklists
  • Talos (by Cisco) – Shows general domain reputation status

Summary #

ActionResult
✅ Use a domain with some historyMore likely to be trusted by inbox providers
✅ Build slowly with clean contentHelps you avoid spam folders and throttling
❌ Send bulk emails from a brand-new domainLikely to get blocked or flagged
❌ Ignore engagement rates and complaintsHurts your future deliverability

A strong domain reputation takes time to earn but pays off with better inbox placement and higher open rates. If you’re setting up email masking, we strongly recommend using a domain with some history and following best practices to protect its reputation.

Updated on July 25, 2025
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