How to Choose an Email Service Provider (ESP)

This week, I met with a company that was considering leaving its email service provider (ESP) and building its email system internally. I would have said no if you asked me a decade ago if that were a good idea. However, times have changed, and the technology of ESPs is pretty easy to implement if you know what you’re doing. I’ve even built and implemented my own with my colleague Adam Small.

What Changed with Email Service Providers?

The biggest change with ESPs has been in deliverability. It’s not the ESPs that changed; it’s the internet service providers (ISPs). Email deliverability professionals at major ESPs used to have direct contact with ISPs to troubleshoot and ensure good deliverability. Over time, ISPs have shut down those offices and turned to algorithms to capture and monitor sender reputation, analyze content, block or accept email, and route it into SPAM folders or the inbox.

Keep in mind that getting delivered does NOT mean getting in the inbox! 100% of your emails could go to the Junk Folder, equating to 100% deliverability. Whether or not you’re using an ESP doesn’t give you a better chance of reaching the inbox if you know what you’re doing. That’s why you have to deploy an inbox placement monitoring platform.

There are discreet characteristics that Email Service Providers offer that you may not wish to redevelop internally, though. You’ll have to evaluate the cost of development to the cost of the email service. In my opinion, when you begin sending hundreds of thousands of emails per month, you may want to develop your own solution.

And, of course, pricing is key! We don’t see too big a difference in features between many of the top email service providers in the market compared to smaller ESPs. If you can narrow down the features above that are critical to your organization, then I think shopping on price makes sense. And if you’re sending millions of emails, it may even make sense to integrate with a third party like Sendgrid, or even build your own MTA.

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