What Happens to Your Email When You Die?

Jun 30 2008

Now I know that this is a morbid post title, but as I was driving today I had a thought pop into my head, What the heck happens to your email accounts when you die? Has anyone ever talked about this? Does your next of kin contact all the ISPs that you have email accounts with and deactivate them? Do they just live on getting more and more email? Does anyone know?

Consider this in the fact of your email list churn or non respondents. Have you ever once considered the fact that maybe the fact that they have stopped reading your email is that they have died? I can tell you I had never considered this as something to think about before this past week. How do you know? Do you send out an email with a subject line “Alive or Dead? Please confirm?”. That might be one way of taking a whack at this issue, but as we are growing the upward online demographic more and more each week, month and year we might need to start considering this in our inactive files. 

What this bodes well for is list hygiene and keeping your list in order. So many people have “dirty” lists where they are not taking the actions to cull or move non active emails to another list. They simply continue to mail to them come hell (no pun intended) or high water. So what are you doing? Are you keeping on top of your list and working on segmenting addresses based on inactivity? I hope so as unless their next of kin took a liking the the email address they had or got access to it, you are simply mailing into the ether.


Published in Deliverability, E-Mail Delivery, E-Mail Marketing, ISP Relations

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    Matt says:

    Kind of a morbid post today…

    Many ISPs (especially web based providers) have an inactive account time frame, that requires a user to login at least ever 30/60/90 days, depending on the ISP, before disabling the account and begin returning hard bounces.

    As for your cable/dial up provider – I’d guess when you stop paying your bills they will cancel service… But likely someone will take care of this (i.e. next of kin) before they cancel due to non-payment.