Normally best to start reading at the beginning.....

" I was thinking of responding but then I said to myself, If you can't say
something nice, don't say anything....   Oooops was that my outside voice?
Perhaps a new customer service rep????

M


From: Evan Brastow [mailto:ebras...@automatedemblem.com] 
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 9:30 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Is there an Outlook tool for this?

Hi guys,

I have a customer service employee that is having some issues lately. Twice
in the past month, she has accidentally put an address in the To: field of
her emails that shouldn't be there. In other words, she sent




-----Original Message-----
From: Kent, Larry CTR US USA [mailto:larry.k...@us.army.mil] 
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 11:03 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Is there an Outlook tool for this? (UNCLASSIFIED)

Classification: UNCLASSIFIED
Caveats: NONE

And what was that?...If you don't stop it  you'll go blind...

-----Original Message-----
From: Matt Moore [mailto:mattmoore...@hotmail.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 1:35 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Is there an Outlook tool for this?

That was my first response but then I fell back on what my mom said......

 

From: Dana J. Scott [mailto:d...@sutinfirm.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 10:21 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Is there an Outlook tool for this?

 

You can't fix stupid - Ron White

 

From: Orland, Kathleen [mailto:korl...@rogers.com]
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 11:15 AM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Is there an Outlook tool for this?

 

There are seldom technical solutions to behaviour problems - Ed Crowley.


 

From: Evan Brastow [mailto:ebras...@automatedemblem.com]
Sent: 11 March 2011 12:30
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Is there an Outlook tool for this?

 

Hi guys,

 

I have a customer service employee that is having some issues lately.
Twice in the past month, she has accidentally put an address in the To:
field of her emails that shouldn't be there. In other words, she sent an
email to customer A, and accidentally put an address from customer B in
there as well. Customer B received the email meant for customer A and was
quite upset (because their pricing is different - long story.)

 

Anyway. I looked at MAPILab but didn't see anything for this, but what I'm
hoping for is that there might be an tool that could analyze an email before
sending, and if there are two different domains in the To; or Cc: fields, it
will alert the sender.

 

Anyone know of anything like that?

 

Thanks,

 

Evan

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