For heart-centered coaches who want their emails to be seen, trusted, and acted on...
A plain-English diagnostic that walks you through your core email infrastructure signals that affect trust, deliverability, and visibility.

So, if the Checkup showed you more uncertainty than you expected, this is the next step.
You became a coach, creator, healer, consultant, or business owner because you had work to share, not because you dreamed of spending your afternoons reading DNS records.
Maybe someone set it up for you.
Maybe the platform said “verified.”
Maybe your tech person is wonderful.
And still, you need a way to know whether the pieces that affect deliverability are actually in place.
Not because you need to do everything yourself.
Because your emails are too important to leave completely unverified.
The Self-Check gives you a plain-English way to look at the core pieces that influence whether your emails are trusted, delivered, and seen.
You do not have to be the technician.
But you do need to understand what is carrying your message.
You will not be handed a pile of tech terms and told to figure it out.
For each area, you’ll get a plain-English explanation of what the piece does, why it matters, where to look, and how to interpret what you find. You do not need to already know what SPF, DKIM, DMARC, or DNS records mean. The Self-Check is designed to help those pieces finally make sense (even if you've never heard of them before).
You’ll check:
Your visible sending identity
Your actual sending platform
SPF, DKIM, and DMARC
Dedicated sending domain setup
Tracking link behavior
Branded and secure links
Reply-to settings
Unsubscribe and suppression practices
List health and engagement signals
Basic testing and monitoring
The goal is not to turn you into an email deliverability technician.
The goal is to help you understand the pieces that carry your message, so you can stop relying on vague reassurance and start seeing what is actually in place.
When the structure makes sense, the next step gets easier.
The $17 Email Infrastructure Checkup gives you the 18-point overview.
The Self-Check goes deeper.
It helps you look at the actual signals behind your answers, including DNS lookup guidance and plain-English instructions for checking the records and settings that support your email infrastructure.
You do not need to become a DNS expert.
You just need to know whether the foundation carrying your message is steady, shaky, or unknown.
The Self-Check is the bridge between “I wonder” and “now I know what to look at.”
You send emails through a CRM, ESP, funnel tool, or course platform
You are not sure whether your domain authentication is complete
You have heard of SPF, DKIM, or DMARC but do not know how to verify them (or you've never heard of them!)
You use tracking links and are not sure whether they are helping or hurting trust
You want plain-English instructions instead of tech-speak
You want to understand your setup before your next launch, nurture sequence, or invitation email
This is especially useful if you use tools like GoHighLevel, FG Funnels, Kajabi, Mailchimp, MailerLite, ConvertKit, ActiveCampaign, Flodesk, or a similar platform.
You’ll know where to look, what to check, and where your setup may need attention.
This is for the coach who does not want to become technical, but does want to stop guessing.
The guided Self-Check diagnostic
Plain-English DNS checking instructions
MXToolbox-style lookup guidance
SPF, DKIM, and DMARC check steps
Sending identity and domain alignment prompts
Link and tracking-domain checks
Reply-to and list-health review prompts
A simple result framework so you know 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 are not alone.
DNS records, SPF, DKIM, DMARC, tracking domains, and email authentication can make very smart coaches suddenly want to close the laptop and go reorganize the junk drawer.
That does not mean you are bad at business. And it certainly doesn't make you a bad coach or healer.
It means this is technical infrastructure, and it was never designed to feel intuitive to coaches, healers, consultants, or heart-centered business owners. (It may have been created to make engineers feel needed!)
If you want to understand what is going on and walk through the checks yourself, Inbox Rescue Self-Check is the right next step.
But if you already know you would rather have me look at the technical pieces for you, choose Inbox Rescue Quick Review instead.
With the Quick Review, you’ll answer a few key questions, send me test emails, and I’ll review the visible and hidden signals your email system is sending. Then I’ll send you a plain-English report showing what looks solid, what looks uncertain, and what needs attention first.
When you’ve read through your report and had any questions answered, you’ll be able to return to the original Checkup and answer those confusing questions with confidence.
Email deliverability is my hobby. It does not have to be yours.
After purchase, you’ll receive access to the Self-Check so you can begin reviewing your email infrastructure and identifying the places where your setup may need attention.
This Self-Check does not guarantee inbox placement. It helps you 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 three decades building and managing personal, professional, and corporate websites across evolving platforms and technologies.
For more than fifteen years, she ran her own business and served as her own IT department as a health and life coach, helping individuals create sustainable change through structured, disciplined approaches.
Her work sits at the intersection of technical architecture and human behavior.
Infrastructure first. Then growth.
Need help?
Reply to any email from us, or send an email to [email protected]
