Scale volume without damaging reputation
NitWings designs warmup plans for new IPs, new domains, ESP migrations, and new traffic streams. Ramp decisions are based on mailbox-provider feedback, bounce rate, complaint rate, engagement quality, deferrals, and throttling.
Deliverables
You receive a ramp schedule, ISP-specific controls, pause thresholds, monitoring plan, and stream separation guidance.
Where this service helps
IP and Domain Warmup Automation is useful when teams need a clear technical path, not only a surface-level recommendation. Plan and automate IP and domain warmup using real-time bounce, complaint, engagement, and ISP response signals. NitWings reviews the visible symptom, the underlying system behavior, and the operational process around it so the fix is practical for marketing, platform, and DevOps teams.
Signals reviewed
- Volume patterns, warmup pace, stream separation, frequency, segmentation, and ISP-specific response.
- Domain and IP pool usage, transactional versus promotional routing, complaint risk, and pause thresholds.
- Campaign timing, audience quality, ramp plans, and provider feedback loops.
Work included
- Discovery call to understand the sending model, affected domains, tools, traffic streams, and current pain.
- Evidence review using DNS records, message headers, platform data, logs, reports, provider signals, and recent changes.
- Prioritized remediation plan that separates urgent production risks from longer-term improvements.
- Hands-on implementation guidance for DNS, platform settings, infrastructure, monitoring, or operational workflow.
Useful outcomes
- Clear explanation of what is failing, why it matters, and which team owns the fix.
- Practical checklist for implementation, validation, monitoring, and follow-up review.
- Reduced uncertainty before high-value sends, migrations, policy changes, or incident recovery.
- Documentation your team can reuse for future audits, provider changes, and operational handover.
Engagement flow
NitWings starts with the symptom, confirms it against evidence, then turns the findings into a sequence your team can execute. The goal is not a generic report. The goal is a working email, infrastructure, or monitoring process that your team can understand and continue operating.
What should we share first?
Send the domain, affected platform, recent headers, bounce samples, provider warnings, screenshots, logs, and the change that happened before the issue appeared.
How quickly can this help?
Urgent issues are triaged by blast radius. Broken authentication, blocklists, throttling, spam placement, queue backlog, and provider warnings are reviewed first.
What happens after the fix?
You receive notes, validation steps, monitoring recommendations, and prevention guidance so the same class of issue is easier to detect next time.