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HowtoUseGmailtoManageYourWebsiteEmail

Tuesday,November10,2009 How-To

Just about everyone and their hairdresser’s granny has a Gmail account (Google’s email service). It’s free, it’s web-based so you can access it from anywhere, there are tons of applications that work with it, it (usually) blocks spam like a champ and it holds a boatload of archived email. What’s not to love?  We highly recommend Gmail as an email service and if you can get the name you want, it’s a good companion account for bloggers, if for example, you’d like to keep your “real life” email anonymous.

But what if you want to present a more polished web presence? What if you’re using your website or your blog for business? It usually looks more established to send and receive email using your domain name.  It carries a bit more grativas.  Would you hire a realtor who’s email address was .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) (or @gmail.com or @yahoo.com or any other free service).  You might, but that realtor would probably appear more “pro” by having an email address like .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address), don’t you agree?

Sometimes clients will ask us to forward the emails from their website email (.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)) to their free web-based email address. That’s an alright solution, but what happens when you want to respond to that received email?  It will come from your @freeservice.com address instead of @yourdomain.com.  And that breaks the tone that we set by sending to the domain name to begin with.

So, how do you send and receive email using your domain name?

Well, you can always check your email using webmail, accessing your email via your web host’s control panel.  They generally provide one or more options for reviewing your mail.  Again, this is an alright solution, it’s web-based, but… ehhh, the interfaces aren’t that nice and they’re not as robust as using something like a desktop-based email program (or “client”, as they are often called, that lives on your computer as opposed to on the web), say Outlook, Thunderbird or Mail for Macs.  But did you know that you can use your trusty Gmail account to act just like one of the usual desktop-based email client?  You can check your Gmail and send/receive your domain email all in one convenient web-based location. No matter where you are, if there’s an internet connection, you can access your email (especially handy if you’re in a serious relationship with your iPhone or Blackberry).

Follow the steps below to make your Gmail account do more than just receive chain mail and jokes about kittens from your Aunt Edith.

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