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Canter & Siegel never had it so good
RSS·2·Spam doesn't only get your unsolicited commercial email past modern junk mail filters. It guarantees that your mail will be read. RSS·2·Spam creates real email from syndicated news feeds. Real email means a real chance that the reader will click on your link, which means a real chance at a sale.
Say “Goodbye” to “Re: se0ie23 news”
If “se0ie23” doesn't make any sense to you, then your potential customers won't understand it either. The spam you're sending out is filled with m15pelled words, mismatched sentences and fake email addresses. Unfortunately, making your mail less readable only makes it easier for filters to catch and real readers to ignore.
RSS·2·Spam sends your potential customers real email, made from the finest modern source of English-language writing: blogs. RSS·2·Spam downloads fresh news feeds from random blogs. It uses the blog author's real subject line, real email address and real content for the email body. The only things that change are links: all of these point to your marketing site. Real content means filters and human beings alike can't tell it's spam.
If the content is even slightly interesting to the reader, they'll click on a link and find themselves at your marketing site, looking for more information on whatever the blog was originally about. They won't find it, but they'll still have found your product. You'll have their undivided attention.
Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night
By providing valuable, interesting and unique content, RSS·2·Spam gets your unsolicited commercial email through any non-whitelisting spam filter. Recipients will always read messages you send because they might actually be useful. They'll click on the links and see your products, again and again.
RSS·2·Spam can also track responses to messages and send similar and related content to those email addresses in the future, further ensuring that your mail will get through. By sending people information they're interested in, you're adding legitimacy to your mailings; it's almost as good as opt-in.
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