An email feedback loop (FBL) is a mechanism offered by major inbox providers that sends a notification to the email sender when one of their recipients clicks the ‘report spam’ or ‘mark as junk’ button in their email client. When a recipient reports an email as spam, the inbox provider registers a complaint against the sender. Without a feedback loop, that complaint would be invisible to the sender: they would have no way of knowing which recipients were complaining or which campaigns were triggering the highest complaint rates. FBLs change this by reporting the complaint back to the sender, typically in the form of a copy of the original email with complaint metadata attached.
Inbox providers that offer feedback loops include Yahoo Mail, Comcast, and several others. Gmail handles spam complaints differently: rather than sending FBL reports, Gmail provides complaint rate data through Google Postmaster Tools. Signing up for feedback loops requires registering with each inbox provider individually, and most ESPs facilitate this process on behalf of their customers and apply complaint data to their suppression logic.
For B2B email marketers, monitoring complaint rates through feedback loops and Postmaster Tools is a fundamental deliverability practice. A complaint rate above 0.08 percent is enough to trigger inbox placement degradation at Gmail. Acting on FBL reports by suppressing complainants immediately, reviewing which campaigns generated the complaints, and addressing the root cause (usually relevance or frequency) is essential for maintaining a healthy sending reputation and consistent inbox placement.
Email complaint rate is the percentage of recipients who mark your email as spam relative to the total number of emails delivered. Gmail’s published guidance sets 0.10 percent as the threshold that begins to affect inbox placement, and recommends keeping complaint rates below 0.08 percent consistently. Yahoo Mail has similar thresholds. Complaint rates above 0.30 percent can result in significant delivery failures. Because these thresholds are based on delivered rather than opened emails, even a well-engaged list needs to be managed carefully to keep complaint rates within safe bounds.
Each inbox provider has its own FBL programme. Yahoo Mail’s FBL is one of the most widely used: you can register at postmaster.yahooinc.com. Google Postmaster Tools (postmaster.google.com) is the equivalent for Gmail, providing complaint rate and sender reputation data rather than individual complaint notifications. Most ESPs have established FBL relationships and automatically apply complaint data to suppression lists on your behalf. Check with your ESP whether they manage FBL subscriptions centrally or whether you need to register separately.
Immediately suppress the complaining address from all future sends. Analyse the complaint in context: which campaign did it come from? What is the complaint rate for that campaign overall? If it is an isolated complaint from an otherwise well-performing send, it may simply be a recipient who forgot they subscribed. If it is part of a pattern of high complaints from a specific campaign or segment, that signals a relevance or frequency problem that needs addressing before the next send to that audience.
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