For heart-centered coaches who want their emails reviewed without becoming their own tech department...

Maybe the Checkup showed more uncertainty than you expected.
Maybe SPF, DKIM, DMARC, DNS records, tracking links, and authentication settings made your eyes glaze over.
That does not mean you are bad at business. Or that you're a bad coach.
It means this is technical infrastructure, and most business owners were never taught how to verify whether the pieces carrying their message are actually working together.
Maybe your platform says “verified.”
Maybe your tech person is wonderful.
Maybe support rushed through the setup and told you everything was fine.
And still, you may not know whether your email system is fully aligned, trustworthy, and understandable to the inbox providers deciding what happens next.
Because a green checkmark is not the same as a clear picture..
You do not need to do the technical review yourself.
But you do need to understand what was checked, what was found, and what it means.
This is not the same as asking platform support, “Is my domain connected?”
Platform support is usually checking whether their piece of the system is working.
The Quick Review looks at the bigger deliverability picture: how your sender identity, domain records, authentication, reply-to address, tracking links, and visible email signals fit together.
This is not a vague “looks fine” review.
You’ll get a clear report showing:
What is set up correctly
What appears incomplete, misaligned, or uncertain
What may be creating deliverability risk
What the findings mean in normal business language
What needs attention first
Platform support often tells you whether their part is connected.
The Quick Review tells you whether the important pieces make sense together and explains the findings in language you can actually understand and use.
You send the test emails. I read the signals. You get the plain-English answer.
Tech support usually answers one narrow question:
“Is this connected?”
The Quick Review answers a better business question:
“Does this setup make sense as the system carrying my emails?”
A platform tech may only see their own platform. A domain registrar may only see DNS. An email service may only confirm that one record is present.
But deliverability depends on how the pieces work together.
Your "from address," sending domain, SPF, DKIM, DMARC, tracking links, reply-to address, list practices, and engagement signals all contribute to whether your emails look trustworthy.
The Quick Review does not replace your platform’s tech support. It helps you know what to ask, what to verify, and what may need deeper attention.
This is not rushed setup support.
This is a plain-English review of the structure carrying your message.
The Self-Check walks you through the process.
The Quick Review has me do the technical reading for you.
With the Self-Check, you inspect your own setup using plain-English instructions.
With the Quick Review, you send me the information I need, and I review the key infrastructure signals myself.
This is for the moment when you do not want more instructions. You want someone who knows what to check, what it means, and how to explain it clearly.
The Self-Check helps you verify.
The Quick Review lets you hand me the confusing part.
You understand the importance to your business and your revenue of your emails reaching your prospects, clients, and partners.
You completed the Checkup and had too many “I don’t know” answers
You do not want to read DNS records or email headers yourself
You want someone to review the technical pieces and explain what they mean
You are not sure whether your platform, domain, and email records are working together
You want a plain-English report before deciding what to fix
You would rather spend your time serving clients than decoding deliverability settings
This is especially useful if you use tools like GoHighLevel, FG Funnels, Kajabi, Mailchimp, MailerLite, ConvertKit, ActiveCampaign, Flodesk, or a similar platform.
This is for the coach who wants clarity without becoming the technician.
A short intake form
Instructions for sending test emails
Review of your visible sender and reply-to setup
Review of header authentication signals
Review of SPF, DKIM, DMARC, and alignment indicators
Review of tracking link behavior and obvious link risks
A plain-English summary report
Recommendations for what needs attention first
You’ll be able to see whether your email infrastructure looks solid, uncertain, or risky
before you keep sending into the unknown.
This turns “I have no idea” into “now I know what to check next.”
You do not have to explain the problem perfectly.
You do not have to know what SPF, DKIM, DMARC, or alignment mean.
You do not even have to know whether your platform is set up correctly.
That is the point of the review.
You’ll send the test emails, answer the intake questions, and I’ll read the technical signals for you.
Email deliverability is my hobby. It does not have to be yours.
After purchase, you’ll receive instructions for completing your intake and sending the test emails I need for your Quick Review.
This review does not guarantee inbox placement. It helps identify infrastructure issues that may affect whether your emails are trusted, delivered, and seen.
With nearly forty years in IT, infrastructure, and online systems, Jeanne understands how systems fail, how they hold, and how small hidden gaps can create expensive problems.
She has spent over four decades building and managing personal, professional, and corporate websites across evolving platforms and technologies.
For more than fifteen years, she has run her own business and served as her own IT department, navigating the same practical questions coaches and small business owners face every day: platforms, domains, email systems, automations, client communication, and the invisible pieces that have to work before growth can happen.
Her work sits at the intersection of technical architecture and human behavior, translating complex systems into plain-English decisions business owners can actually use.
Infrastructure first. Then growth.
Need help?
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