Vor Kurzem aufgerufene Suchen
Keine vor kurzem aufgerufene Suchen

Craig Rodrigues
Beigetreten 16. Okt. 2021
·
Letzte Aktivität 16. Okt. 2021
Folge ich
0
Follower
0
Gesamtaktivitäten
2
Stimmen
0
Abonnement
1
AKTIVITÄTSÜBERSICHT
BADGES
BEITRÄGE
POSTS
COMMUNITY-KOMMENTARE
BEITRAGSKOMMENTARE
AKTIVITÄTSÜBERSICHT
Neueste Aktivität von Craig Rodrigues
Craig Rodrigues hat einen Kommentar hinterlassen
@... I am working with a Zendesk setup, and following these instructions: https://support.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/203663336-Adding-support-addresses-for-users-to-submit-tickets
we have it set up so that the support address is support@mydomain.com .
This works fine, and the e-mails generated by Zendesk have:
From: mysetup <support@mydomain.com>
Reply-To: mysetup <support@mydomain.com>
The e-mails are being sent out properly, but some of our customers are finding these e-mails in the SPAM folder.
I analyzed the e-mails in my customer's SPAM folder and see:
SPF: | PASS |
---|---|
DKIM: | 'PASS' with domain zendesk.com |
DMARC: | 'FAIL' |
DMARC is failing because DKIM/SPF is not aligned with the Reply-To: address.
When sending e-mails, is it possible to get Zendesk to sign the e-mails with DKIM/SPF for mydomain.com instead of zendesk.com?
When my customer's e-mail system sees SPF signed for one domain (zendesk.com), but From: and Reply-To: contains another domain (mydomain.com), then this fails DMARC and gets flagged as spam.
Kommentar anzeigen · Gepostet 09. Sept. 2021 · Craig Rodrigues
0
Follower
1
Stimme
0
Kommentare