Business brokers need a secondary domain for email marketing to protect their primary domain’s reputation. It isolates risks like spam complaints or deliverability issues while keeping your core brand intact. This guide shows why it’s essential and how to set it up effectively.
In 2024, I received 3,865 generic marketing emails from business brokers. Almost all came from their primary domains. This approach risks damaging your domain’s reputation, increasing the likelihood of your emails ending up in spam or getting blocked altogether.
Goal: Demonstrate why business brokers need a secondary domain and how to set one up for email marketing.
A domain is the part of a website address that comes after the ‘www’ and email address that comes after the "@" in emails. It's your digital "address" where people can find you online or contact you. Your primary domain is used for general and direct communication with specific or highly targeted contacts.
Examples:
Transworld’s @tworld.com
Sunbelt’s @sunbeltnetwork.com
Murphy’s @Murphybusiness.com
Business Brokers Should not be Sending Bulk Emails from Their Primary Domain
Sending bulk emails from your primary domain is highly discouraged by your email provider (Outlook, Gmail, etc). Moreover, this puts you at risks from ramifications that are very difficult to come back from, including:
Common bulk emails I see broker sending from their primary domain are:
While these messages provide value, sending them indiscriminately can harm your domain’s reputation.
A secondary domain is often similar to your primary domain but serves a different purpose, typically for marketing. For example:
Primary Domain: tupelosmb.com
Secondary Domain: tupelomail.com
All replies can still route back to your primary domain, maintaining a seamless experience while protecting your main domain’s reputation.
How to create a secondary domain?
Setting up your secondary domain is a 3 step process:
You will need to purchase your secondary domain. You can buy domains from Google domain, Namecheap, GoDaddy, there are many others.
Citation - How to Geek
DNS (Domain Name System) translates your domain name into an IP address—essentially an internet phonebook. Follow these steps:
Here’s a video to help with these steps
1. Set Up an SPF Record
This specifies which mail servers can send emails on behalf of your domain.
2. Set Up a DKIM Record
DKIM adds a digital signature to your emails to ensure they haven’t been altered.
3. Set Up a DMARC Record
DMARC specifies how to handle emails that fail SPF/DKIM checks.
4. Verify DNS Settings
Use tools like MXToolbox or your email provider’s diagnostics to ensure proper configuration.
Once your secondary domain email accounts are set up, connect them to cold email automation tools (warming up your new domain) to streamline your outreach. Warming up an email address is the process of establishing a reputation to increase its email sending limit. Every email provider has email sending limits, which can be quite limiting if you want to do outreach at scale.
However, brand new domains don’t have the reputation needed to even come close to these hard limits.
Use a tools to warm your email domain like:
Tupelo is a holistic software solution trusted by hundreds of business brokers. When it comes to email marketing, we take every precaution to protect your domain's reputation. Our campaigns strictly adhere to your email provider's daily send limits, and we carefully stagger email sends throughout the day to avoid triggering spam filters. Additionally, we strongly recommend using a secondary domain to further safeguard your primary domain's reputation and ensure seamless email deliverability.
Tupelo is the CRM and marketing solution for business brokers!