Ok let me resume: 

1.) it's a non-tecnical person 
2.) his task is to sell more
3.) he don't know what means being flooded with "marketing mails" because
you filter them out all of this trash.

Solution: disable spam filtering for this guy (or bether the entire
marketing dept)
Say nothing to anyone until they ask you. Then explain that this are the
same mails he want to send out in the future.

Markus ;-)



> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Andy Ognenoff
> Sent: Friday, January 23, 2004 3:37 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [Declude.JunkMail] Email Marketing
> 
> I need some help with a request I got yesterday from our 
> marketing dept.  I walk into work yesterday to find that 
> marketing, in their infinite wisdom, have decided to start 
> doing email marketing.  Of course they didn't involve any 
> technical people until I stumbled across the rumor of such activity.
> They want to use various data sources (like those bowls you 
> drop your business card into at a restaurant to win a free 
> lunch) to send out announcements, promotions, special offers 
> etc. I quickly told them that before they do anything like 
> that they need to sit down and listen to what some of the 
> ramifications of doing this are.
> 
> So here is my dilemma:  These people are VERY non-technical 
> and my greatest worry as the mail admin is that some "bright" 
> marketing person is going to sit down with Outlook, plug a 
> bunch of customer names into their address book and start 
> sending out spam.  I know we fight external spammers but how 
> do you combat the possibility of one of your users doing so?
> 
> I know the benefits of a well-run email marketing campaign, 
> but as we all know, the difference between that and SPAM is a 
> very thin line.  For example, I have no idea if we state 
> anywhere that by dropping your business card in the bowl you 
> agree to receive commercial messages from us (and therefore I 
> won't let them use that as a source for this.)  I know on our 
> web site we ask permission but we have never done anything 
> with these lists of customers before and frankly I don't know 
> the best way to proceed with this.
> 
> How would you go about explaining the technical ramifications 
> of proceeding with email marketing (ie: potentially getting 
> blacklisted, setting up a good double opt-in/opt-out 
> mechanism, etc.) to a set of users that won't understand it 
> if you tell them that you can't just sit down and start sending away.
> 
> Thanks for the help in advance!
> 
> Andy Ognenoff
> Online Systems Administrator
> Direct: (262)250-2860
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> -----------------------------
> Cousins Submarines, Inc.
> http://www.cousinssubs.com
> 
> 
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