Email Deliverability
Nothing announces that your sender reputation is degrading. There is no alert. The open rate just slides from 34 percent to 22 over six weeks, and everyone assumes the subject lines got worse or the audience got tired. By the time someone checks the domain reputation and finds the real answer, you have been quietly filtered for a month and rebuilding takes longer than the damage did.
The signals were all there, spread across the email platform and the DNS records, changing slowly enough that no human watching a dashboard once a week would catch it. That is exactly the kind of dull, continuous attention an agent is good at. Skynet watches the trend rather than the snapshot.
How it works
Watch the leading signals
Connect your email platform and let the agent track what moves before placement does: hard bounce rate, spam complaints, engagement broken out by receiving domain, and how much of your list has gone quiet.
Slice by domain
Aggregate numbers hide the problem. If engagement is fine everywhere except one major mailbox provider, that is not audience fatigue — it is filtering, and only the per-domain view shows it.
Alert on the drift
The agent compares each run to the trend it remembers and flags a slide early, while it is still a small correction rather than a reputation rebuild.
Propose the fix
When something is off, ask for the specifics: which segments to suppress, which authentication records look wrong, which sends preceded the drop. You approve any change to the list or the sending setup.
Build it from a prompt
Put a watch on it and stop guessing.
The value is early warning. Deliverability problems are cheap to fix in week one and expensive in week eight, and the only thing standing between those two is somebody noticing. That noticing is now automatic.