No way should a startup in their right mind be paying MailChimp or the other autoresponder giants. As subscriber lists, those prices get extortionate, and for what? Sending out a small number of actual unique emails?We need to bootstrap at the beginning. The number of subscriptions are the first thing to monitor to stay out of unnecessary debt. If you can't avoid them, then keep them to an absolute minimum. Who genuinely needs to send 50k legit marketing emails to only 500 subscribers?I prefer an emailing service that charges me for more emails, regardless of how many subscribers, it's far more cost-considerate and realistic.TinyEmail's first paid tier is $15 p.m. That's more than reasonable for 15k emails per month.Also, the major autoresponder brands put me off because so many MLM spammy emails I've received over the years came through the major services and it impacted how I perceive them.So whilst I don't believe that being forced to input a physical address in the sender profile due to ICANN legislature is the best way to do this (because it's not appropriate to have a business address in all respective niches, and we're not going to use our home addresses so this is a hidden cost), I like the intention of TinyEmail to stop spam before it gets sent, it build a better reputation for readers when they see TinyEmail in the branding. I like the direct straight-to-the-point replies from the owner, as opposed to the typical corporate hassle of communicating with the big leagues.
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