Author: Muhammad Shahzad
After purchasing your domains, creating mailboxes, and configuring SPF, DKIM, DMARC, and MX records, you may feel ready to launch your first cold email campaign.
However, there is one critical step that separates professional cold email marketers from beginners:
Email Warmup
Many people spend hundreds of dollars on:
Then they connect everything and immediately start sending cold emails.
This is one of the fastest ways to damage a new domain.
Email providers such as Gmail, Outlook, Yahoo, and Apple Mail do not automatically trust new mailboxes.
Before they allow your emails into inboxes consistently, they want evidence that:
- You are a legitimate sender
- You are not a spammer
- Your mailboxes behave like real people
- Your domain has a positive reputation
This process of building trust is called Email Warmup.
In this lesson, you will learn:
- What email warmup is
- Why email warmup matters
- Automated warmup
- Manual warmup
- Email copy warmup
- Newsletter warmup
- Building natural inbox activity
- Safe sending limits
- Warmup schedules
- How long warmup should last
- Common mistakes
- Maintaining deliverability during campaigns
Before continuing, make sure your authentication records are properly configured:
Without authentication, warmup becomes much less effective.
What Is Email Warmup?
Email warmup is the process of gradually building trust and reputation for a new mailbox.
Think of a brand-new mailbox like a brand-new employee.
Nobody knows them yet.
They have:
- No reputation
- No trust history
- No communication history
Email providers feel the same way about new domains and mailboxes.
When Gmail sees a brand-new mailbox suddenly sending 100 or 200 cold emails per day, it often becomes suspicious.
Real people do not usually behave that way.
Warmup helps your mailbox develop a normal, trustworthy sending pattern before outreach begins.
Why Email Providers Care About Warmup
Companies like Google and Microsoft spend billions fighting spam.
Every day they analyze:
- Sending patterns
- Reply rates
- Engagement
- Opens
- Spam complaints
- Bounce rates
- Inbox activity
Their goal is simple:
Keep spam out of inboxes.
Because of this, new mailboxes must earn trust before being allowed to send larger volumes successfully.
Warmup helps create that trust.
Understanding Mailbox Reputation
Every mailbox develops its own reputation.
Examples:
- james@yourdomain.com
- sarah@yourdomain.com
- mike@yourdomain.com
Each mailbox develops unique signals such as:
- Sending history
- Reply history
- Engagement levels
- User behaviour
The healthier these signals become, the better your deliverability usually gets.
Warmup is how that process begins.
Automated Warmup
Automated warmup is the most common warmup method today.
Many cold email platforms include built-in warmup systems.
Examples include:
These systems connect your mailbox to large warmup networks.
Inside those networks, thousands of mailboxes exchange emails daily.
The system automatically:
- Sends emails
- Opens emails
- Generates replies
- Removes messages from spam
- Marks messages as important
These activities create positive engagement signals.
To Gmail and Outlook, your mailbox appears active and trustworthy.
Why Automated Warmup Works
The purpose of automated warmup is not simply sending emails.
The goal is to create healthy mailbox behaviour.
Providers observe:
- Conversations occurring
- Replies being generated
- Emails being read
- Emails being organized
These signals improve sender trust over time.
This is why most professional cold email marketers start automated warmup immediately after mailbox creation.
How Long Should Automated Warmup Run?
Many beginners ask:
“When do I stop warmup?”
The answer is:
Usually, you don’t.
Professional agencies often continue automated warmup even after campaigns start.
Warmup acts like ongoing reputation maintenance.
Think of it like going to the gym.
You don’t stop exercising after becoming healthy.
You continue maintaining your health.
Mailbox reputation works similarly.
Manual Warmup: The Hidden Advantage
While automated warmup is useful, real human activity is often even more valuable.
Manual warmup means using the mailbox like a real person would.
Examples include:
- Sending emails to colleagues
- Receiving replies
- Asking questions
- Participating in conversations
- Organizing messages
Real interactions create natural engagement patterns.
Many experienced deliverability specialists combine:
- Automated warmup
- Manual warmup
for the best results.
The Email Copy Warmup Strategy
One warmup method that many people overlook is email copy warmup.
Most cold email campaigns eventually send similar messaging repeatedly.
Before launching campaigns, some marketers begin sending versions of their future outreach emails between internal accounts.
For example:
Mailbox A sends a short business email to Mailbox B.
And Mailbox B replies.
Mailbox C joins the conversation.
The goal is not prospecting.
The goal is helping providers see realistic business communication.
This creates healthy engagement signals while gradually introducing the type of content your mailbox will later send during campaigns.
What Type of Emails Should You Send During Warmup?
Keep messages natural.
Examples:
- Project updates
- Business discussions
- Meeting requests
- Collaboration questions
- Industry conversations
Avoid obvious spam language.
Professional communication usually performs best.
Newsletter Warmup Strategy
One of my favourite warmup methods is newsletter engagement.
Real professionals receive emails every day.
Your mailbox should too.
Create accounts on:
- Business websites
- SaaS companies
- Marketing blogs
- Industry publications
- E-commerce stores
- Technology websites
Subscribe using your new mailbox.
This creates ongoing inbound activity.
Why Newsletter Warmup Helps
When Gmail sees your mailbox:
- Receiving emails
- Opening emails
- Reading emails
- Clicking links
it appears much more natural.
Real users receive emails every day.
Your mailbox should do the same.
E-Commerce Newsletter Strategy
A very effective technique is subscribing to popular e-commerce stores.
Many online stores send:
- Daily promotions
- Product updates
- Discounts
- New arrivals
This creates consistent inbox activity.
Your mailbox begins receiving legitimate emails from trusted businesses.
That helps create a more natural communication pattern.
Create Accounts on Different Websites
Professional mailbox warmup often includes creating accounts on legitimate websites.
Examples:
- SaaS tools
- CRM platforms
- Marketing software
- Business communities
- Industry newsletters
Every new account often generates:
- Welcome emails
- Verification emails
- Updates
- Notifications
These activities help build inbox history.
Engage With Emails Like a Real User
Don’t just receive emails.
Interact with them.
Actions may include:
- Opening messages
- Reading content
- Clicking links
- Moving emails into folders
- Marking important emails
These actions help create stronger engagement signals.
Safe Warmup Schedule
One of the biggest mistakes beginners make is increasing volume too quickly.
A safer approach is gradual growth.
| Week | Recommended Sending Volume |
|---|---|
| Week 1 | 5 to 10 emails/day |
| Week 2 | 10 to 15 emails/day |
| Week 3 | 15 to 20 emails/day |
| Week 4 | 20 to 30 emails/day |
This growth pattern appears much more natural.
How Long Should Warmup Last?
Most cold email professionals recommend:
Minimum
15 Days
Recommended
21–30 Days
Ideal
30+ Days
Older domains with longer warmup histories generally perform better.
Warmup During Active Campaigns
One of the biggest misconceptions is that warmup ends once campaigns begin.
Professional marketers often continue warmup throughout campaigns.
Benefits include:
- Ongoing engagement
- Healthier reputation
- Stronger deliverability
- Better inbox placement
Think of warmup as ongoing maintenance rather than a one-time task.
Common Warmup Mistakes
The most common mistakes include:
Sending Too Many Emails Too Quickly
A new mailbox should never jump directly to large sending volumes.
Ignoring DNS Authentication
Always verify SPF, DKIM, and DMARC.
Use:
before warmup begins.
No Incoming Mail
Real users receive emails.
Your mailbox should too.
Stopping Warmup Completely
Reputation maintenance should continue.
Launching Campaigns Too Early
Patience usually leads to better deliverability.
Warmup Checklist Before Launching Campaigns
Before sending cold emails,
verify:
- Domains configured
- Mailboxes created
- SPF passing
- DKIM passing
- DMARC passing
- MX records verified
- Profile picture added
- Signature configured
- Automated warmup active
- Manual warmup active
- Newsletter subscriptions active
- Natural inbox activity present
- Sending limits respected
Final Thoughts
Email warmup is one of the most overlooked parts of cold email marketing.
Many marketers focus on:
- Email copy
- Subject lines
- Lead generation
while ignoring sender reputation.
But reputation is often the difference between:
An email reaching the inbox
and
An email landing in spam.
The best cold email systems combine:
- Strong domains
- Proper DNS authentication
- Professional mailboxes
- Automated warmup
- Manual warmup
- Newsletter engagement
- Real inbox activity
Together, these create the trust needed for long-term cold email success.


