On Thu, March 20, 2008 2:22 pm, Bob Proulx wrote: > When I get a recall message from someone I routinely forward their > message back to them along with a note asking why they wanted to have a > copy if their message sent back to them just to drive home the point that > it doesn't work.
When I worked for an independent cell phone store, we received an e-mail from one of our carrier reps (a employee of the carrier who was our liason to the carrier). He sent a message to all the stores he 'represented'. The e-mail had a pretty vague subject ("numbers" or something), and the body of the message was vague, like "Here's the latest" with an attached Excel spreadsheet. I almost deleted it until he not only 'recalled' it, but sent a message saying to delete the original message. The spreadsheet? It contained sales data for ALL his stores - number of employees, $ amount of sales, # of sales, revenue, etc. He obviously intended to send this to his boss, but sent it to all of his sales stores. Quite funny. The "recall" didn't work.