
Dotdigital blog
Stop sending BFCM emails the same way you did last year. Mailbox providers have changed rules on marketing emails; ensure your strategy meets new requirements to boost your email deliverability.
If you’re planning your Black Friday/Cyber Monday (BFCM) email blasts for 2025 the same way you did last year, stop. Things in the world of email marketing aren’t working the way they used to.
Mailbox providers like Gmail, Yahoo, and Outlook have changed the rules on how they handle marketing emails. Just look at the recent updates to the Gmail Promotions tab. If you haven’t changed with them, you might find your best marketing emails sitting in the junk folder while your competitors get the sales.
Here is the lowdown on why making an impact in the inbox feels tougher this year, and exactly what you need to do about it.
Back in the day, you could send a ton of emails during BFCM week, cross your fingers, and hope for the best. As long as you weren’t being obviously spammy and you ‘sort of’ segmented your list, you’d generally get through.
But times have changed. If you try to blast the same big lists without warming things up or checking your engagement, there is a good chance your emails will get blocked. Mailbox providers are protective of their users, and they have new ways to keep the noise out.
First things first, remember: it’s not just you. Mailbox filters have gotten smarter, and the rules are stricter. Here’s an overview of what’s really happening behind the scenes:
The fundamentals of good email marketing still work. In fact, they work better than ever because fewer people are doing them right. To land with impact this BF/CM and throughout 2026, make sure you have the following in place:
Make sure every person on your marketing list has explicitly consented to receiving your marketing. This makes sure your list is full of contacts ready to engage.
Regularly clean up your marketing lists by removing closed or unresponsive accounts. If someone hasn’t opened or clicked an email in a long time, they’re hurting your sender reputation. Send out regular re-engagement messages to prompt preference updates and remove unengaged contacts before BFCM.
Get your technical house in order so providers can trust you are who you claim to be. Sender Policy Framework (SPF) and DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) help demonstrate brand legitimacy. Domain-based Message Authentication Reporting and Conformance (DMARC) tells a receiving email server what to do after checking SPF and DKIM: whether to reject or accept the incoming email.
If these aren’t set up correctly, your high-volume BFCM emails could be quarantined as spam, undelivered, or even lead to brand impersonation. Make sure you have all three in place before hitting send.
Maintain a steady, predictable sending pattern in the run-up to BFCM. Suddenly increasing your number of sends will look like suspicious activity, so just keep doing what you’re doing and don’t worry about reducing your sends before the sales period.
Mailbox providers use opens and clicks as signals that people want and like receiving your marketing, so don’t treat them like vanity metrics; they’re all important. Instead, focus your segments on your most active, engaged contacts during this period.
Having a simple, one-click unsubscribe option included in your email template is essential. The process should be effortless to reduce user frustration and prevent future spam complaints.
Here are a few of my top tips:
The big idea for 2025 is simple: you cannot just repeat previous years’ strategies. Sending smarter, more relevant emails and keeping a constant eye on your deliverability data is critical.
If you get ahead of these changes and adjust your plan now, Black Friday and Cyber Monday can still be your biggest days of the year. You just have to play by the new, stricter rules.