Sender reputation is the real gatekeeper
Gmail, Outlook, and every other major provider track a reputation score for every sending domain and IP address. That score is built from signals like open rates, reply rates, spam complaints, and bounce rates over time. A brand new domain has no history at all, which providers treat cautiously by default, not because the content is bad but because there is no track record yet to trust.
The three things that tank a new domain fast
- Sending high volume immediately. A domain that goes from zero to five hundred emails a day overnight looks exactly like a spam operation spinning up, regardless of what is in the messages.
- A high bounce rate. Unverified or guessed email addresses bounce, and bounce rate is one of the heaviest weighted signals providers use. This is why list quality, covered in our email finding guide, matters before deliverability even becomes a factor.
- Low engagement. Emails that get deleted unread or marked as spam train the provider's filters to route future messages from that domain away from the inbox automatically.
What a warm up tool actually does
A warm up tool like lemwarm works by enrolling your sending address in a network of other real inboxes. It sends and receives a gradually increasing volume of realistic email between these accounts, and those accounts open, reply to, and occasionally rescue messages from spam, the exact positive signals that build sender reputation over time.
The process typically runs for two to four weeks before a new domain is ready for full cold outreach volume, starting with a small number of daily emails and scaling up as positive engagement signals accumulate. Skipping this step and sending cold volume from day one is the single most common reason a new domain gets buried in spam within the first week.
Warm up is ongoing, not a one time setup
Reputation is not a switch that gets flipped once and stays on. A domain that goes quiet for a few weeks, or that suddenly spikes in volume again, sees its reputation drift back down. Keeping warm up running continuously in the background, even at a low level alongside active campaigns, maintains the reputation that took weeks to build.
Where this fits inside lemlist
Warm up and a deliverability monitoring dashboard are built into every plan, not sold as a separate add-on. That means the domain reputation work and the actual sending happen in the same place, with one dashboard showing both your sequence performance and your sender health at a glance.
Start warming up your domain free
A quick checklist before sending your first real campaign
- SPF, DKIM, and DMARC records set up correctly on the sending domain
- At least two weeks of warm up activity before any cold volume goes out
- A verified list, not a guessed one, to keep bounce rate low from day one
- A sending volume that increases gradually over the first few weeks rather than starting at full capacity
Get the list and copy right first using our cold outreach guide, then use this checklist to make sure the domain sending it actually reaches the inbox.