Last week JangoSMTP announced the launch of their new user interface. The new interface is cleaner and more intuitive – a huge improvement. Make sure to check it out by signing up for a free account at http://www.jangosmtp.com/Free-Account.asp.
For a sneak peak, here is a screenshot of the welcome screen:

Jango SMTP recently announced the launch of their new Event API. With the Event API, a number of different events can trigger a call to the users web service. This saves users the time and hassle of polling the standard API in order to synchronize with the Jango SMTP database.
To lean more and to read instructions on how to use the new Jango SMTP Event API, visit their announcement: New Feature: Transactional Email Event API.
JangoSMTP just launched a new setting. Now you can choose to preserve the original Message-ID in your email header instead of having it overwritten by the JagnoSMTP system Message-ID.
This is most beneficial to those with a customer reply mangement system who would like to tag bounces and responses with their own Message-ID.
For more information on this feature, see JangoSMTP’s annoucement: New Setting: Preserving the original Message-ID header in transactional email.
1. You send a lot of email and want to send it quickly.
2. You send a lot of email and want to improve your deliverability.
3. You want to be able to track opens or clicks on your transactional emails.
4. You want unsubscribes to be handled automatically.
5. You want bounces to be handled automatically.
6. You’d like to access SMTP log files.
7. Your ISP blocks port 25, leaving you unable to send email.
8. You are having trouble sending email through your phone.
9. You’d like to see advanced reporting on the emails you send.
10. You want to send email through an SMTP server that has an SSL connection to your email client.
Many people have trouble sending email from the Amazon Cloud for a variety of reasons. The Jango SMTP server is a great alternative for sending emails and solves many of the issues that EC2 users have come across.
Deliverability
Jango SMTP takes a variety of steps to ensure the best email deliverability. The smtp server is on a number of whitelists, signs every email with DomainKeys/DKIM, uses SPF/SenderID authentication and offers Return Path Certification. Jango SMTP also participats in feedback loops with ISPs and automatically tracks invalid email addresses and prevents you from sending to them in the future.
Volume
The Jango SMTP server can scale up to any sending volume requested. Emails will be delivered and delivered quickly.
Reliability
The SMTP server is monitored 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to ensure smooth delivery of customers’ emails to their recipients.
To learn more about the steps that Jango SMTP and its parent company, JangoMail take to ensure excellent deliverabilty, read our JangoMail email deliverability page.
If you are using an SMTP server to send transactional emails, make sure that all emails are signed with DomainKeys/DKIM. Signing emails with DomainKeys/DKIM ensures email providers that your emails are not spam, forged or phishing attempts. This is a must-have if you rely on transactional emails to tell your customers vital information about their order, membership, etc.
For more information on DomainKeys/DKIM read the following:
DKIM fights phishing and e-mail forgery
DomainKeys Identified Mail
DKIM.org
The Jango SMTP Server signs all emails with DomainKeys/DKIM and takes further measures to ensure the best deliverability.
Are you using the Jango SMTP Server to send transactional emails? If so, here is a great article that covers 19 transactional emails you could be sending:
Transactional Emails 2.0: Think Beyond the Purchase
Sending transactional emails through your smtp server can be a powerful and successful part of your marketing plan.
The Jango SMTP Server is the first SMTP Server with Open and Click Tracking. It also offers the benefits of DomainKeys/DKIM signing, grouping, logging, and extreme email delivery.
The Jango SMTP Server can be used by web programmers to send transactional emails or anyone who sends emails through desktop clients like Outlook, Thunderbird, Windows Mail or even Gmail.
Try a free SMTP Server acount and send up to 200 emails a month. Upgrade any time to a paid account and send more emails.