Ironically, efforts to block spam sometimes cost businesses revenue by
preventing employees from seeing mail from legitimate contacts,
including customers. Anti-spam experts call these missed or lost emails
of the wanted variety "false positives."
Employees may still
miss the wanted mail if a business does not use any anti-spam for fear
of missing wanted mail. Humans can also mistakenly delete or visually
skip over a wanted mail that is mixed in with lots of unwanted email.
Businesses
who sell a high volume of a low ticket price item may not feel the
sting of losing a potential customer as much as those for whom even one
lost email could mean giving up a sale worth tens of thousands of
dollars or more. The Internet makes it so easy to find competitors -
customers may move on to the next guy without trying to make phone
contact if they don't get a response to email.
Perhaps the
best-known business cost of email spam is time wasted by employees
wading through their inbox to delete the bad and find the good. In some
cases, employees will actually read the spam and may get sidetracked
from their job to read websites of special offer emails or worse.
In
some cases, employees get a signal each time new mail arrives. When
that new mail is spam, many clicks are necessary to see what the new
mail was and delete it. The employee may be distracted from their
current task repeatedly throughout the day, causing a drag on
productivity.
Less discussed is the change in emotional state or
morale that may occur to some people when they are exposed to
degrading, intrusive or threatening language or images in some types of
email spam.
The Mail Cruncher service my company created is designed to address these issues:
-
Most businesses choose not to reject mail, ensuring that all wanted
business mail gets seen. While accepting mail isn't usually what ISPs
want to do - it accepting and tagging does seem to be in the best interests of the businesses the ISP serves.
-
Suspect mail from "slippery senders" is delivered as a once-a-day list
about 3:45 pm. Employee time spent dealing with spam is compressed to
two minutes or less per day.
- "Borking" of spam subjects
and content is available as an option. Borking transforms words into
less-damaging, more humorous phrasing ala the Swedish Chef accent from
Sesame Street. Anecdotally, users report that this helps takes the
shock effect away from authors of offensive spam.
- Color
coding, sorting and grouping help to bring mail most likely to be
wanted to the top of the Mail Cruncher list. The sender's from address
as well as "name" are displayed to make it eaiser and faster to scan
the list quickly, then a single click deletes all unwanted mail.
-
Text of emails can be safely viewed in Mail Cruncher without executing
any viruses or revealing to spammers that your address is a good one.
Spammers can tell you opened their email the moment you view the mail
using Outlook or other unprotected email software, by a trick of hidden
images or images you see which are included in HTML mail.
See http://MailCruncher.com/ for a 60 day risk-free trial.
|
|
|||||||
|
Search
Categories
Recent Photos
Recent Visitors
Cristian - Thu 19 Feb 2009 01:10 AM PST
April Lorenzen - Fri 11 Apr 2008 08:31 AM PDT
kitchen - Wed 23 May 2007 11:00 PM PDT
Al Turtle - Fri 24 Mar 2006 04:52 PM PST
Lelain - Sun 19 Feb 2006 10:17 PM PST
Recent Entries
Recent Comments
This Month
Month Archive
Login
|
Business Problems Caused by Email spam
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||
|
|
|||||||