How to hide IP address from G Suite?

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I want to send cold emails with Reply.io from Gmail G Suite.
Considering that it's cold emails, no matter how natural and professional emails might sound, there is still a danger of blacklisting for spam by G-Suite.
How do I avoid it?

I understand that as domains and emails go, those can be changed.
But what about IP?

Do I use proxies for it? How would I set it up for Gmail?
Or is another way?
I guess, what is the easiest way?

Thank you, guys.
 
You simply can't. Consider that you have to point your domain to the g suite dns so essentially all the backend config is done for you
If you need to mess around with IP you will need to make your own mail server with postfix or something like that.
 
You simply can't. Consider that you have to point your domain to the g suite dns so essentially all the backend config is done for you
If you need to mess around with IP you will need to make your own mail server with postfix or something like that.
Thank you.
Isn't postfix part of the Google family now? I might be wrong.
It's sounds that set-up and configuration is a bit complex for non-techie.
How would you suggest to go about it?

Or is there an alternative that is simpler?

Or is there a way to get a rotating IP from an internet provider?

Or some other solution? Let's assume I won'r send via Gmail. What is better alternative for cold outreaches to work with Reply,.io?
 
Isn't postfix part of the Google family now? I might be wrong.

Nothing to do

If you can't set it up by yourself, there are plenty of services in BHW that offer exactly this (SMPT forwarding server set up exclusively for you). Don't forget that EACH IP you buy needs warming up, this means that the delivery rate is high (not many bounces) and no spam flagging by receivers. Some people send already warmed up IP But if you are planning to attach also to a nameserver the IP it's nearly the same as buying a new one, so you may also need a warming up services which adds up more money

Conclusion: The life of the spammer is hard nowadays
 
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