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By Andy Tarnoff RSS Feed
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What is a blog?  For us it is a short blurb that we write when the mood strikes us.  It can be first person, funny or informative. In short, a blog is whatever we want it to be. Published Feb. 22, 2008 at 1:02 p.m.
Tags: e-mail, spam, opt out, web design

I get a lot of e-mail ... hundreds and hundreds of messages each day. Granted, most of it's spam. And because I'm on many of the "reflector" e-mail addresses at OnMilwaukee.com, I'm cc'ed on tons, too. But a big portion of the e-mail I get is from newsletters I frankly don't remember subscribing to.

It seems like whether I checked that "please send me future promotional mailings" box or now, they do, anyway. So recently, I took matters into my own hands and started unsubscribing to just about every e-mail newsletter that came my way.

The results were unexpected.

More times then not, these legitimate businesses informed me that my cancellation would go only into effect after several days. As a technology company, we've developed dozens of e-mail newsletters for ourselves and for our clients. OnMilwaukee.com, alone, has more than 37,000 registered users who subscribe to 10 different e-mail newsletters.

And the moment someone clicks "unsubscribe," they're gone. Do these other companies have some intern manually opting people out of their newsletters? Can they really not automate this process?

Here are a few examples I saved:

My online banking site: "In 5 business days, your choice will go in effect."

A photo reprint site: "Please allow 5 business days for your account to reflect this update."

Dell.com: "This e-mail address will be opted out from all marketing e-mail subscriptions within 10 business days. In the interim, you may continue to receive e-mail marketing to which you originally subscribed."

Drugstore.com: " Your preferences will be updated as soon as possible. This usually takes approximately 24 hours, though it may take as long as 10 days. During that time, you may receive email from us according to your previous settings."

USAirways.com: "Allow up to five days for your name to be removed."

Others, like classmates.com, don't give a link and make you jump through major hoops to unsubscribe. You need to use their search function to wade through membership info. Then, when you finally find it ...

"We thought you'd like to know: It can take up to 10 days to process new or canceled subscriptions. You will occasionally receive emails that tell you about updates to your account or announce improvements to Classmates.com."

Wow, thanks for nothing, Classmates.com. So am I unsubscribed or not?

Can you imagine this going down in the brick and mortar world? Like if you canceled a credit card, and they said, "Thank you for canceling. Your credit card will become inactive in five days. In the meantime, it can still be used."

It just seems to weird and so low-tech. I'd prefer to have my preferences honored now, thank you very much. But if I have to wait a week to shrink my bulging e-mail inbox, I guess I made it this long. If those e-mails keep coming back, though, I plan on reporting them as spam. What else can I do?

4 comments about this article.
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Recent Talkbacks ...
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brewerfan13 I'm just learning web at my current job and found out if someone asks to unsubscribe ...
brunocarlson Good luck. I manage to do maybe a few every once and a while. I cannot do much ...
brunocarlson Good luck. I manage to do maybe a few every once and a while. I cannot do much ...
alba Nice article, I've noticed the same thing. Classmates.com is a terrible web ...

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