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January 12, 2004
CAN-Spam Link Compendium
**Update - I think this list has really gotten out of hand, but then again, it is a compendium...** It seems that everyone and their brother has written a piece on CAN-SPAM. Here are links to a few of the more reputable pieces on the subject. Also, if have a dedicated email campaign manager/service provider for your marketing emails, contact that vendor for their take. We have been getting a ton of stuff from Email Labs, our email vendor, on how they are working to get all of their clients in compliance with the act. 3/2/04: Internet Retailer: How CAN-Spam helps marketers sharpen their e-mail skills 3/1/04: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel - GETTING spam under control 2/28/04: Mondaq - United States: The Federal CAN-SPAM Act -- New Requirements for Commercial E-Mail 2/23/04: Opt-in News - THE Great CAN-SPAM Freak Out 2/23/04: AZCentral.com - Companies battling spam despite new law 2/18/04: PC Magazine - Spam: A Reality Check 2/10/04: InformationWeek - Can-Spam Changes Life For Legit E-Mailers 2/9/04: BtoBOnline - CAN-SPAM alters e-mail list rental practices 2/9/04: DMNews - List Firms Provide E-Mail Suppression Services Under CAN-SPAM 2/6/04: Arial Software - The Top Five Questions and Answers about Responsible Email Marketing 2/4/04: eWeek.com - Keeping Up With CAN-SPAM Act 2/3/04: Entrepreneuer.com - How to Run a Successful, Legal E-Mail Marketing Campaign 2/2/04: ClickZ - What I Learned at Spam Camp 2/2/04: Internetnews.com - Can-Spam Conference: How to Comply with a "Total Failure" 1/29/04: EmailLabs - Complying and Confused: EmailLabs CAN-SPAM Audit of Permission Based Emails 1/29/04: Dow, Lohnes & Albertson, PLLC - CAN-Spam Legal Brief (5-page PDF) 1/29/04: ClickZ - Complying With CAN-SPAM: A 10-Point Checklist for Marketers 1/28/04: Puget Sound Research Forum - Regulatory Reaction to SPAM: A Summary of a UW School of Law Business Briefing Breakfast and Current Press Reaction 1/28/04: eMarketer - Do You Understand CAN SPAM? 1/27/04: Internet Retailer: Opt-in e-mail marketers already comply with CAN-Spam - but not all of it 1/27/04: Marketing Profs - Is Your Company CAN-SPAM Compliant?- by: Neil J. Squillante 1/27/04: Internetnews.com - Costs of Blocking Legit E-Mail To Soar 1/26/04: Blue sky factory - CAN-SPAM Survey Reveals Most E-Mail Marketing Non-Compliant 1/23/04: [GrokDotCom] - CAN-SPAM: Loin-Girding 101 1/21/04: Marketing Sherpa - Update Memo: CAN-SPAM Good News & Bad, Bad, Bad, Bad News 1/20/04: USATODAY - Worst spammers unfazed as law trips other e-mailers 1/16/04: MarketingWonk - Can-Spam Having Zero Impact 1/16/04: Wired - Open Up a Can of Spam Marketing Sherpa: Urgent Memo: How CAN-SPAM May Affect Permission Email Marketers & Publishers WebproWorld - CANSPAM's Effect on Marketing EmailLabs - CAN-Spam Act Signed! Emergency Teleseminar on Can-Spam ClickZ - 2004: The Year of Suppression DMNews - What to Watch for in 2004 1/12/04: ClickZ - CAN-SPAM: The Reality 1/12/04: Spam Laws - CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 12/8/03: InformationWeek - Congress OKs First National Anti-Spam Bill I'd like to know when a group of emails becomes a list. If my sales managers take a marketing email and send it to a few dozen of their sales contacts without their opt-in, does that mean their list needs to follow the can-spam guidelines? Thanks, Michelle From an e-marketer and sales management perspective, I always discouraged this from happening, because they were not "permission based lists." This practice could easily anger of alienate some customers. However, if you extended permission to mean "prior business relationship", then perhaps it's allowed. Based on how the law reads (and, I'm not a lawyer, so consult yours), this is what's stated: * If your e-mail list isn't opt-in or double opt-in ("prior affirmative consent"), include a clear notice that states the e-mail is an advertisement or solicitation in commercial messages (section 5(a)(5)(A)(I)). If your list is opt-in or double opt-in, you're exempt from this provision. * Also, your sales rep has no way of adding an automatic unsubscribe mechanism to his/her list, unless using a legit, database-driven, email marketing software package. * The practice I always encouraged with my sales reps (especially in the case of special events, road shows, or anything else they wanted to alert their contacts of) was to send me the list, and I'd add it to a separate database in our email campaign manager, and send out with the opt out functionality, as well as the tracking benefits. This now is doubly important with CAN-SPAM, that you add the additional compliance requirements into you communiqué. * More to the point, this could violate the 'suppression list' concept included in the law, which states, basically (again, consult your legal counsel) that a customer can 'globally unsubscribe' from marketing messages from your company. If you have a number of divisions, and your customer has opted out of a division list, or a parent company list, you sales person will most likely not know that. Only by having them run their lists through your 'corporate email marketing clearing house' to test the list against your unsubscribe and suppression list, would you be near compliance with the law. Can anyone suggest an inexpensive email campaign software package? Up until now, we've managed our own lists without automated help. Now it's time. Post a comment
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