Bird is now an omnichannel suite where email is one channel among many. ITPison is a dedicated email infrastructure platform — that is the entire product, not a feature tier
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Last verified: [Month Year] — ITPison reviews comparison data quarterly.
Bird’s product roadmap now serves email, SMS, WhatsApp, and payments across a unified customer engagement platform.
Email delivery remains a strong component — but it shares organizational focus, engineering resources, and support infrastructure with other channels.
Buyers who chose SparkPost for its concentrated email-infrastructure focus are now evaluating a different product than the one they originally selected.
ITPison has one scope: enterprise email delivery via OMICard™ and the March™ MTA. No SMS, no payments, no omnichannel pivot — and no roadmap drift. For infrastructure buyers, that stability is a structural commitment, not a positioning claim.
ITPison is also built for white-label and multi-tenant operators. Per-tenant IP isolation and branded delivery are architectural defaults — not features retrofitted onto a platform serving other channels.
ITPison core technology enters production (Omicard)
ITPison formally founded as dedicated email infrastructure
>SparkPost founded as email delivery platform
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MessageBird acquires SparkPost for $600M. Omnichannel pivot begins.
SparkPost rebranded as Bird Email. Email becomes one channel.
ITPison doesn’t need to position against what Bird has become. The acquisition history is the argument. ITPison occupies the category Bird abandoned: a focused, infrastructure-grade email platform with no competing priorities.
SparkPost / Bird routes traffic through shared cloud infrastructure with an API relay model. Dedicated IPs are available as an add-on, but the underlying sending stack remains a dependency on infrastructure Bird controls — and may reprioritize.
ITPison’s architecture is built around the March™ MTA — a relay-only engine running on fully owned source code. Routing logic, retry behavior, and failover decisions are controlled at the infrastructure level. Nothing in the critical sending path depends on a third-party stack.
Proprietary relay-only engine. Fully owned source code. Routing, retry, and failover behavior are controlled at the infrastructure layer — not inherited from a shared relay.
Transactional and campaign traffic run on separate infrastructure. One sender’s behavior cannot affect another’s reputation. Isolation is architectural, not configurational.
ITPison’s infrastructure is not shared with SMS, WhatsApp, or payments workloads. Email delivery is the only job this infrastructure performs.
Bird’s entire model is API-first. That is not a positioning choice — it is a structural constraint. It works well for teams with dedicated engineering resources. For enterprise environments with compartmentalized IT, security review processes, or legacy systems, this creates a deployment timeline measured in sprints, not days
ITPison’s Drop-Folder Integration requires no SDK, no API development, and no custom integration code. Your system writes the recipient list, email content, and send configuration to a monitored directory. ITPison’s infrastructure retrieves the files and handles the rest. Every computer system can write files to a folder — which means any team, in any environment, can send through dedicated email infrastructure without a single line of integration code.
In large enterprises, connecting an external system via API often requires security reviews, multi-layer approvals, and engineering cycles that can take months. Drop-Folder bypasses that process entirely — because writing a file to a directory requires no special technical permissions to build.
Bird cannot offer Drop-Folder without rebuilding their integration architecture. ITPison offers Drop-Folder, API, and SMTP — the full integration spectrum. Whichever path fits your environment, ITPison supports it.
SparkPost / Bird’s ISP relations, deliverability mediation, and data analysis are gated behind a premium add-on plan. Message event history is limited to 10 days — anything beyond that requires configuring webhooks and storing data yourself.
For enterprise IT and ops teams running incident response or compliance workflows, this creates operational gaps that shouldn’t exist at any price tier.
ITPison’s consultation-led provisioning means delivery setup is scoped before your first email goes out — not after problems emerge. Delivery visibility is built into the platform. Sending logs, status, and performance tracking are accessible without additional cloud services, webhook pipelines, or support tier upgrades.
• Your team has engineering resources to maintain API integrations
• You need strong analytics, predictive signals, and deliverability benchmarking
• You want a self-serve, immediately provisionable accountYou want a self-serve, immediately provisionable account
• Omnichannel capabilities (SMS, WhatsApp) are part of your roadmap
• You need to integrate without an engineering project or API development cycle
• ISP mediation and deliverability support being an upsell is a concern
• You require a vendor whose roadmap is exclusively focused on email infrastructure
Choose SparkPost / Bird if: You need analytics depth, omnichannel capability, and self-serve access
• You need white-label or multi-tenant infrastructure with per-tenant IP isolation that Bird's omnichannel roadmap does not prioritize
• You want to integrate without engineering resources, API development, or approval cycles
• Deliverability and IP reputation are operationally critical — not an analytics exercise
• You need a white-label or multi-tenant sending platform
• A vendor with a single-focus, stable email infrastructure roadmap is a requirement
• Self-serve, immediate provisioning is a hard requirement
• You need advanced predictive analytics and deliverability benchmarking dashboards
• Omnichannel (SMS, WhatsApp) is a core requirement alongside email
Choose ITPison if: You need dedicated infrastructure, zero-code integration, and a vendor whose roadmap won’t drift
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Your current sending configuration, volume, and integration requirements are reviewed before any infrastructure is set up. Configuration decisions are made with your team, not unilaterally.
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Dedicated sending infrastructure, IP pools, and your chosen integration method — Drop-Folder, API, or SMTP — are configured to your specifications before go-live.
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Testing typically occurs in parallel with existing SparkPost / Bird traffic. Cutover is coordinated after delivery performance is confirmed against your requirements.
If email infrastructure is a business dependency, it deserves a dedicated vendor.
Tell us about your environment. We’ll scope the right infrastructure configuration before anything is provisioned.
(Account setup begins with a short consultation.)