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How Shared and Dedicated IP Influence Email Deliverability

There are a multitude of factors that affect email deliverability. The content you send plays its part. The quality of a mailing list is important. Steering clear from spam traps and blacklists can never be underestimated.

One more thing that’s even more important than all of these combined is an impeccable reputation of the IP address you use for sending emails. Together with the quality of your domain, they form Email Sender Reputation – a key factor that’s used to determine whether an email should be allowed into an inbox, end up in a spam folder, or be discarded without a trace.

When it comes to your sending IP, you have two options – a shared or a dedicated IP address. Which one you should choose will depend on a lot of factors. Let’s explore the pros and cons of each approach.

Shared and dedicated IP – what are they?

Each email sent on the internet originates from an IP address (publicly represented by a domain). Each email sending provider (ESP) gives a set of IPs to its users and, using these addresses, distributes emails on their behalf.

Shared IP is a single email address that’s used by more than one sender. Frequently, there could be hundreds or thousands of senders using the very same address, especially on free email services such as Gmail. The performance and habits of each sender affect the performance of others in the same pool.

Dedicated IP is an address that can only be used by a single sender (domain). The entire history of such an address is built, usually from the ground up, by a company using such a service. ESPs offer a dedicated IP as an additional purchase or a plan.

Benefits of using a dedicated IP

Not sharing your IP with a bunch of anonymous senders sure sounds like a good idea. And rightly so – there are certain benefits of having a dedicated IP:

Benefits of using a shared IP

Sharing IP with other email senders also has its benefits:

Shared vs. dedicated IP – which one should you choose?

You can probably already see that both solutions are targeted at slightly different groups of senders. Let’s reiterate anyway who should consider either of these approaches.

When to go with a dedicated IP

When to go with a shared IP

Don’t forget to warm up your IP! 

If you decide to switch to a dedicated IP, make sure you incorporate a technique called IP warming. It’s about sending, gradually, more and more volume with a newly set up IP. This way, you teach incoming servers to trust your emails so that, by the time you’re ready to send that large marketing campaign, there won’t be any surprises. 

If you were to send tens of thousands of emails on day one, you would probably see a lot of unexpected bounces. Incoming servers would have no record of earlier activity and would take such a sudden increase in volume with a big grain of salt. And, if they did, this would affect the performance of your future campaigns. Disaster.

Luckily, many providers of transactional emails, such as SendGrid, Amazon SES or Sparkpost, now offer automated IP warmup that takes care of the process for you.

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