A suppression list is a database of email addresses that should never receive emails from your organization. It includes addresses that have bounced, unsubscribed, filed spam complaints, or been manually added due to legal or compliance reasons. Proper suppression list management is essential for maintaining sender reputation and legal compliance.
Suppression lists protect both your sender reputation and your legal compliance. Emailing addresses that have bounced generates more bounces, damaging your reputation. Emailing unsubscribers violates their preferences and likely violates laws like CAN-SPAM, GDPR, and CASL. Emailing complainers generates more complaints and can get you blacklisted. Beyond reputation, ignoring suppression requests can result in significant fines - GDPR violations can cost up to 4% of global revenue. Proper suppression is not optional; it is a fundamental requirement for email senders.
Before every email send, your email system checks each recipient address against the suppression list. Any matches are automatically excluded from the send. Suppression lists are populated from multiple sources: hard bounces are added automatically when emails permanently fail, unsubscribe requests add addresses when recipients opt out, spam complaints from feedback loops add addresses of complainers, and manual additions handle legal requests or known problematic addresses. Good suppression lists are maintained at the organization level, not per campaign, ensuring suppressed addresses are never emailed regardless of which list or segment they might appear in.
Generally no. Hard bounces should stay suppressed permanently as the address is invalid. Spam complaints should stay suppressed as re-emailing could generate more complaints. Unsubscribes can theoretically be removed if the person explicitly re-subscribes through a confirmed opt-in process, but many senders keep them suppressed to avoid any risk.
If you email a hard bounce, you will get another bounce, damaging your reputation. If you email an unsubscriber, you violate their preferences and potentially laws like CAN-SPAM (up to $50,000 per violation). If you email a spam complainer, you will likely get another complaint, further damaging reputation and risking blacklisting.
Export your complete suppression list from your old ESP including bounces, unsubscribes, and complaints with dates. Import this list to your new ESP before sending any emails. Most ESPs have dedicated suppression import features. Never assume your new ESP will automatically have this data - failing to migrate suppressions is a common cause of deliverability disasters.
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