Bulk Email Service
Monthly Fee (See below based on list size)
Monthly fee |
|
|---|---|
| 1 - 2,500 (Send up to 15,000 emails per month) | £25 |
| 2,501-5,000 (Send up to 30,000 emails per month) | £35 |
| 5,001-10,000 (Send up to 60,000 emails per month) | £50 |
| 10,001-15,000 (Send up to 90,000 emails per month) | £75 |
| 15,001-25,000 (Send up to 150,000 emails per month) | £100 |
| 25,001-35,000 (Send up to 210,000 emails per month) | £160 |
| 35,001-50,000 (Send up to 300,000 emails per month) | £240 |
| 50,001-75,000 (Send up to 450,000 emails per month) | £330 |
| 75,001-100,000 (Send up to 600,000 emails per month) | £400 |
| 100,000-125,000 (Send up to 750,000 emails per month) | £470 |
| Bulk Email Account Self managed cost per month (Optional) | £0 |
| Bulk Email Account Managed cost per month (Optional) | £45 |
Keep in touch with your customers by sending newsletters and special offers with our new bulk email service. You can self manage your own account with no cost, or pay a small monthly management fee of £45 for us to take care of your send-outs. The ‘sending’ fee is dependant on your list and usage size, you can send up 6 times your list size in any month without additional charges, therefore a list of 5,000 emails can be sent up to 6 times to a total of 30,000 recipients for just £35 per month. Please note that this service is not available to any form of misuse. Spamming and purchased lists are not acceptable use of our mail server.
Please contact us if you would like to arrange a FREE Trial, we will send your newsletter to 250 of your list members and produce a report similar to the image below free of charge.

Bulk Email Guidelines
Best Practice for Bulk Email Deliverbility
There must be a simple method to terminate a subscription.
Mailing list administrators must provide a simple method for subscribers to terminate their subscriptions, and administrators should provide clear and effective instructions for unsubscribing from a mailing list. Mailings from a list must cease promptly once a subscription is terminated.
There should be alternative methods for terminating a subscription.
Mailing list administrators should make an "out of band" procedure (e.g., an email address to which messages may be sent for further contact via email or telephone) available for those who wish to terminate their mailing list subscriptions but are unable or unwilling to follow standard automated procedures.
Undeliverable addresses must be removed from future mailings.
Mailing list administrators must ensure that the impact of their mailings on the networks and hosts of others is minimized. One of the ways this is accomplished is through pruning invalid or undeliverable addresses.
Mail volume must take recipient systems into account.
List administrators must take steps to ensure that mailings do not overwhelm less robust hosts or networks. For example, if the mailing list has a great number of addresses within a particular domain, the list administrator should contact the administrator for that domain to discuss mail volume issues.
Steps must be taken to prevent use of a mailing list for abusive purposes.
The sad fact is that mailing lists are used by third parties as tools of revenge and malice. Mailing list administrators must take adequate steps to ensure that their lists cannot be used for these purposes. Administrators must maintain a "suppression list" of email addresses from which all subscription requests are rejected. The purpose of the suppression list would be to prevent forged subscription of addresses by unauthorized third parties. Such suppression lists should also give properly authorized domain administrators the option to suppress all mailings to the domains for which they are responsible.
The nature and frequency of mailings should be fully disclosed.
List administrators should make adequate disclosures about the nature of their mailing lists, including the subject matter of the lists and anticipated frequency of messages. A substantive change in the frequency of mailings, or in the size of each message, may constitute a new and separate mailing list requiring a separate subscription.
New subscriber's email addresses must be fully verified before mailings commence.
This is usually accomplished by means of an email message sent to the subscriber's email address to which they must reply, or containing a URL which the subscriber must visit, in order to confirm their desire and permission to have their email address added to the mailing list. However it is implemented, a fundamental requirement of all lists is for full verification of all new subscriptions.
Terms and conditions of address use must be fully disclosed.
Mailing list owners or managers must make adequate disclosures about how subscriber addresses will be used, including whether or not addresses are subject to sale or trade with other parties. Also, conditions of use should be visible and obvious to the potential subscriber. For example, two lines buried deep within a license agreement do not constitute adequate disclosure.
Acquired lists must be used for their original purpose.
Those who are acquiring fully verified mailing lists must examine the terms and conditions under which the addresses were originally compiled and determine that all recipients have in fact confirmed their permission to have their email address added to additional mailing lists of the type that the person acquiring the list intends to operate.
One subscription, one list.
Addresses should not be added to other lists without fully verified consent of the address owner. It should never be assumed that subscribers to a list on one subject want to be added to another list on the same subject, let alone a list on another subject, even if the new list is being operated by the same list owner or manager. A notification about the new mailing list may be appropriate on the existing mailing list, but existing subscribers should never be subscribed automatically to the new list.
