For the most part, we want them to be able to fully admin their exchange servers. I think we want them to be able to manage their servers but make sure they can't screw up the entire org.
From: Don Ely [mailto:don....@gmail.com] Sent: Tuesday, October 27, 2009 11:23 AM To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues Subject: Re: Exchange Design Recomendation What kind of management is required on the Exchange servers is required by the admins in the sister company? On Tue, Oct 27, 2009 at 7:41 AM, Mayo, Shay <shay.m...@absg.com<mailto:shay.m...@absg.com>> wrote: We are about to merge our 2000 user sister company into our Active Directory. We have always had a single domain architecture and now are wanting to move to a multidomain architecture so the sister company's admins can still manage their resources. So I am looking for design ideas. I think the best approach would be to install all of the exchange servers in the same domain and delegate administration to certain Exchange servers to the sister company admins, but I have to present other approaches such as installing the sister company's Exchange servers in their sub domain and discuss why this would or wouldn't be a good idea. So if anyone has any input or can point me to a good article, it would be greatly appreciated! This will be all Exchange 2007 servers. Shay CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE. This electronic mail transmission may contain privileged and/or confidential information and is intended only for the review of the party to whom it is addressed. If you have received this transmission in error, please immediately return it to the sender, delete it and destroy it without reading it. Unintended transmission shall not constitute the waiver of the attorney-client or any other privilege. CONFIDENTIALITY NOTICE. This electronic mail transmission may contain privileged and/or confidential information and is intended only for the review of the party to whom it is addressed. If you have received this transmission in error, please immediately return it to the sender, delete it and destroy it without reading it. Unintended transmission shall not constitute the waiver of the attorney-client or any other privilege.