Google+ Tips on Creating and Sending Holiday Emails ~ High Tech House Calls
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Life has changed there is no doubt and we wanted to reach out to see how you are doing.

As we go through this interesting time, we are trying to look at this as an opportunity to focus on our family and on friends like you. Let us use this extra time to catch up and talk more. Let us cook food that is not fast, but interesting and satisfying. Let us learn to enjoy a time to try new things. Let us find ways to enjoy time at home!

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Jack of All Trades, Master of Many

Jack of All Trades, and Master of Many

We provide technical support for:


Homes and small businesses

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Saturday, November 17, 2012

Tips on Creating and Sending Holiday Emails

Here are some tips to make sharing holiday news electronically a little bit easier:

Do you have a long list of email addresses in a distribution list?

If there are too many email addresses in the list, your Internet Service Provider may mark your message as SPAM and refuse to send it.
  1. You can create mini-distribution lists to get around this. Unfortunately, it is hard to determine what the upper limit size of your distribution list is before it is marked as SPAM.
  2. You can turn to a free email distribution service such as MailChimp (http://mailchimp.com/pricing/free). MailChimp can solve the "large distribution list" problem. MailChimp has a built in SPAM checker. You could also try EmailSPAMCheck (http://www.emailspamtest.com/).
Some general rules to help you avoid your email being identified as SPAM are:
  1. Make sure your email has the Subject line filled in.
  2. Avoid sales pitch buzz words or phrases such as "free" or "click here" anywhere in your email.
What are the best ways to share photos? 

Adding photos as attachments to an email can trigger another limit imposed by your ISP or your recipient's ISP. Emails have a size limit. How can you avoid the size limitation?
  1. Unless you are sending only one or two photos as attachments, forget using attachments in your email.
  2. You can share digital photo albums you created by uploading your photos to sites such as Picasa (http://picasa.google.com/  ) or PhotoBucket (http://beta.photobucket.com/ ). Once your photos are uploaded and organized in a photo album, you can share them via a link.
Carl Thorne
Expert Computer Consulting