Spammers and hackers keep getting more creative when it comes to
infiltrating inboxes and infuriating consumers. Learn to protect
your subscribers and your image.
More than
850 million spoof emails arrived in consumers'
inboxes this past August mimicking the prominent news media brands
CNN and MSNBC and calling into question the integrity and safety of
emails from these and other well-known and trusted media
organizations.
While many consumers may already be skeptical
about emails that claim to be from their bank or request their
social security numbers, they are now left wondering whether
something as innocent as reading the morning headlines might result
in a stolen identity or a hacked computer.
Indeed, more and more media and publishing
executives are waking up to the fact that they are the perfect prey
for cybercriminals. The unique level of trust that these media
companies have with their online viewers and readers, coupled with
the especially high frequency of email they send, makes these
organizations highly attractive targets. In the short term there
are consumer safety issues, but in the long term, consumer trust in
a given company's emails can become broken and it risks losing an
entire channel.
The latest authentication and certification
solutions can protect email recipients from these types of attacks,
but there are also some best practices a media company can adopt to
instill greater trust in their messages. Here are my top five
tips:
- Personalize your emails. Allow subscribers to choose the
emails that interest them with as much granularity as possible and
then stay consistent in sending frequency patterns. Fake emails are
easier to detect when they arrive at atypical times or their
content is inconsistent with the recipient's subscription
choices.
- Clearly brand your email. Use consistent visual branding in
your email messages, including factors such as logos, fonts and
color schemes. Also, ensure consistency in the manner in which your
emails are structured and organized. Use a consistent "From"
address (or consistent address naming convention if you send email
using multiple "From" lines.)
- Use the right email sending system. Media companies have
special sending patterns: breaking news, for example, often means
there will be peak email volumes deployed at unpredictable times.
It is critical to have a system in place that is capable of
delivering large volumes of email rapidly
and securely.
- Hack yourself. There are companies out there that will
launch an attack on your infrastructure and tell you what is weakly
designed, as well as products that scan your systems and alert you
to attacks. There are also solutions that can tell you how your
brand may be misused and abused across the internet without your
knowledge. Bogus websites are just as bad as bogus emails and are
often used together to launch these types of attacks.
Educate consumers
yourself.Use existing
opportunities -- like the point-of-collection of the email address
-- to alert subscribers. Teach them how to tell if an email is real
or fake and what to do if they aren't sure. If you're using a new
technology or best practice designed to make the emails spoof
proof, tell them about it, how it works and what they can or should
look out for.
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