Bulk emailer software?

AdrianF

Free Member
Feb 10, 2012
24
1
looking to start sending out newsletters etc and find MailChimp too limiting - eg I have a PA's email address and want the email to be addressed FAO to the boss

what do people find works? free is good but willing to pay if we have to
 
1

123 IT Solutions

Get yourself an email service and a copy of sendblaster and you are all set.

Sendblaster will manage all your lists including unsubscribes. Very good and extremely fast piece of software. Well worth buying the full version (one time cost)
 
Upvote 0

WestTownWeb

Free Member
Mar 25, 2013
6
1
Most web hosting packages offer PHPlist free and it can be easily be installed through the hosting control panel. I use it on one of my 'spare time' projects to deliver a newsletter.

If you want improved deliverability, look an smtp service such as Mandrill.
 
Upvote 0

Alan

Free Member
  • Aug 16, 2011
    7,089
    1,974
    PHPlists is fine.

    Don't forget, you will either have to rate limit your sending to whatever your email / hosting limits are (often not high) or use a third party bulk email service like Amazon SES (which isn't expensive at $0.10 per thousand, but you will need to go through an quality approval process to go above 1,000 in 24 hours, obviously to weed out total spammers)
     
    Upvote 0

    Carl Barlow

    Free Member
    Dec 29, 2014
    88
    13
    Staffordshire
    It really depends on what you're trying to achieve. We use Infusionsoft for our email marketing because thats only a tiny part of what it does. I would avoid sending email blasts out with the same message to everyone. Infusion allows me to segment my audience to send a much more targeted message, which means it's much more effective, less opt outs/spam reports and in turn more sales :)
     
    Upvote 0
    I have used Express Email Marketing tool on a website.. unfortunately i am unable to post link here. that site offers quite promising features e.g. social marketing , survey builders, real time reports, sign up forms , ready made templates etc etc.
    good luck!
     
    Upvote 0

    EpicWebs

    Free Member
    Feb 7, 2015
    45
    17
    Uk
    I've used MailChimp and Aweber in the past, I still use MailChimp when the free version covers the amount of subscribers a client has, as integrating into a website is pretty easy. If the client requires more subscribers or they are setting up an auto responder series then I use Aweber, it feels nicer and i've found I get a better click through rate for some reason.
     
    Upvote 0
    I've used MailChimp and Aweber in the past, I still use MailChimp when the free version covers the amount of subscribers a client has, as integrating into a website is pretty easy. If the client requires more subscribers or they are setting up an auto responder series then I use Aweber, it feels nicer and i've found I get a better click through rate for some reason.

    Ditto on the MailChimp approach. If it's a small list, it is a good choice. Do you find it easy migrating the list to other services such as AWeber?
     
    Upvote 0
    I've been using MailChimp but I have recently been battling an epidemic of spam sign ups to the newsletter. It's gotten out of control and this is with double opt in. These cannot be bots!

    I'm considering going for the paid versions of AWeber or ConstantContact but I'm afraid I'll still be facing the spam sign up issues!

    That's bizarre, untill recently I always used MailChimp and never had a problem with spam sign-ups. I've used both the free and paid accounts too.

    Recently however, we developed our very own mailing plugin which is not currently available for public use. Depending on how much you spend elsewhere on mail-shots, or if you have to send various mail-shots for clients, it can actually be profitable to hire a developer to create your own software. No subscriptions, no other costs. Just pay to get it developed.
     
    Upvote 0

    macmacman

    Free Member
    May 31, 2007
    408
    22
    Mandrill looks interesting too - I've been using SMTP servers to send website email contact form messages that were otherwise being flagged as spam. I wonder how much Mandrill can improve inbox deliverability if I used GoDaddy's SMTP servers?
    What's all this about then? Sounds interesting. So instead of IMAP or POP3 you use SMTP to send marketing emails out?
     
    Upvote 0
    Mailchimp is great for automation and is compatible with pretty much everything, but does start to get pricey, especially when you compare costs to what Amazon Web Services would charge if you built your own bulk email software.
     
    Upvote 0

    RPower

    Free Member
    Oct 15, 2012
    380
    67
    Bristol
    You know, if you wanted something cheap and cheerful, Google Spreadsheets 'Yet Another Mail Merge' is a great tool.

    You can send 100 per day for free and can create some nice templates in Gmail.

    But as I said that's cheap and cheerful - for bigger systems something like Constant Contact looks awesome.
     
    Upvote 0
    D

    Deleted member 251885

    Really Simple Systems offers an email marketing module that's integrated with the CRM system. This means you can personalise your emails and newsletters using the data you store in your CRM. All your customer engagement data, e.g. click-throughs, is then captured back to you CRM providing great customer insight.
     
    Upvote 0

    Latest Articles

    Join UK Business Forums for free business advice