Agreed on getting a real ticketing system. :) SolarWinds has a pretty nifty one that speaks well with Exchange and it's available as a VM appliance so you can minimize maintenance. It's pretty inexpensive as well.
DAMIEN SOLODOW Systems Engineer 317.447.6033 (office) 317.447.6014 (fax) HARRISON COLLEGE From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of ccollins9 Sent: Wednesday, November 5, 2014 1:39 PM To: exchange Subject: Re: [Exchange] Autoresponder for Customer Service The best thing you could do, if able, would be to get a ticketing system that "checks" the inbox of a designated account and generate tickets based on email sitting in there, then it will auto-reply to those messages explaining a ticket was created and generate an ID for the user. Footprints and Track-It are products i've used to do this. Maybe since the "important" folks want you all do make these improvements they would be willing to pony up some dough so you all can take the customer service to the next level. But short of that, Here's what I would do: 1. Delete the Distribution List--so you can reuse the SMTP address that it has 2. Create a new user mailbox using the same SMTP address of the deleted DL 3. There is no need to "have it logged in somewhere forever". You can simply go into https://OWAAddress/ECP, manage another user, then setup an out of office auto-reply with no ending date. This is done from the server side and "outside" of Outlook, so there is no need to have Outlook running, ever. The only down side to this would be that the user would only get the out of office reply once. Exchange knows when a sender has already received and out of office message from a recipient--this is to prevent the bounce loop. 4. Then I would decide exactly how I want email flow to work. For example, If I want any messages sent to this new address to also get sent to all my technicians I would do this: Create a new DL containing all the technicians. Go into the EMC and bring up the account properties of the new mailbox created in step 2, under "Delivery Options" enable forwarding, then check the option to "deliver message to both forwarding address and mailbox". Checking this will ensure that the message is both forwarded to your technician's DL address AND the out of office reply is generated and sent. On Wed, Nov 5, 2014 at 12:29 PM, Kurt Buff <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: All, We currently have a DL for customer service/technical support, and some (important) folks would like to set up an autoresponder for the address. We are running Exchange 2010, and transitioning from Outlook 2010 to 2013. I've pointed out that you can't put up an autoresponder on a DL, and that there are basically three options (AFAICT - please correct me if I'm wrong!): o- Move the SMTP address to a mailbox with a rule and have it logged in somewhere forever o- Move the SMTP address to a PF and set an autoresponder on it o- Use a third-party product. I've pointed out the risk of a bounce war, and they don't seem to care... Also, AFAICS, a transport rule will only generate a bounce message that looks weird and has only limited characters. Can you folks recommend a (fairly cheap) third party autoresponder for this kind of thing? Thanks, Kurt
