Who is allowed to send mail as you
v=spf1 a mx include:_spf.google.com include:spf.sendinblue.com include:helpscoutemail.com -all
Found 2 separate SPF records on saleshandy.com. The DNS spec only allows one — receivers treat duplicate records as broken and fail your mail.
Cryptographic signature on every send
v=DKIM1; k=rsa; p=MIGfMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBAQUAA4GNADCBiQKBgQDO2pEPKmRT9GzWrDs+P9x4z3BsCqhJDGXZ+XY35ZrtBB252gK3lAFzdaiuuDtVdXpdwQYcvJ3UK/KMz4Dv3Zd6CoejUR0Evlxt4g2DYd8Gine5W0ORybXUGltJw6nAl1SuQXJMUJ//UxqPJ2fu0X6e7m9MgmnRdhyizCHAzGerzQIDAQAB
What receivers do when SPF or DKIM fail
v=DMARC1; p=none; rua=mailto:dmarc@saleshandy.com
Your DMARC policy is "p=none" — monitor-only mode. Inbox providers still respect your SPF/DKIM passes, but failed mail isn't quarantined or rejected. This is fine for the first 2 weeks of a new domain, but you should tighten it once your real sends are clean.
Where your inbound mail is delivered
aspmx.l.google.com, alt3.aspmx.l.google.com, alt4.aspmx.l.google.com, alt1.aspmx.l.google.com, alt2.aspmx.l.google.com
Want this fixed at the source?
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