When you have a good source analysis and data, you can move to the next level of the DMARC policy. Read more here: easydmarc.com/blog/what-is-a-dmarc-policy/
@@andrewheitner9627 The first reports arrive soon after you create a DMARC record and publish it in your DNS. They contain information about your email sending volumes, sources, DMARC policy and alignment settings, and other details. Here is the link to our free DMARC report analyzer: easydmarc.com/tools/dmarc-aggregated-reports
how do i know when i am able to move from p=none to p=quarrantine? what types of tests/reports should I run?
When you have a good source analysis and data, you can move to the next level of the DMARC policy. Read more here:
easydmarc.com/blog/what-is-a-dmarc-policy/
@@easydmarc Thanks. I understand. But what source and data do I analyze? What tools do I use to anlalyze them?
@@andrewheitner9627 The first reports arrive soon after you create a DMARC record and publish it in your DNS. They contain information about your email sending volumes, sources, DMARC policy and alignment settings, and other details. Here is the link to our free DMARC report analyzer: easydmarc.com/tools/dmarc-aggregated-reports