Checkpoints before you send out any email: - I am sending to Email Database the correct list - I proofread all the text in Notepad before having it coded for my HTML messages. - I verified that the offer or other purpose for sending the message is the correct one. - I included Email Database an unsubscribe link and street address as required by CAN-SPAM. (Or, I included all the elements my country's commercial-email regulations require.) - I clicked every link and link-connected image to make sure they all work, and checked to make sure each image has an alt tag describing the content.
I previewed the message in my preview pane and with Email Database images disabled, in different browsers and on different computer platforms. - I proofread my text message and included the link to my message on the Web. - I had one other person look it Email Database over before I hit "send." If you are a leader visualising to become a successful entrepreneur and a business owner I have found one of the best direct sales companies. They can be found at: At times, our inboxes can be full of things that we don't want to read. We welcome communications from friends and business contacts, but we know we don't like the spam that can come into our lives in overwhelming amounts.
Those are easy. However, there are some emails that fall Email Database in between the two. They appear to be from a real person with a real problem, but you are not going to like what happens if you get sucked in. One of the most common email scams is the type Email Database that tells you that you have inherited money from someone you never met, and that has lived in a country on the other side of the globe. What happens is that they tell you that no heir was determined, and the person sending you the email will give you large sums of money just to be listed as the heir .