Oh, wait... OoO only responds once per customer during the period while it's configured. We'd have to turn if off and on again on a regular basis (daily, weekly), and that's not going to work...
Kurt On Wed, Nov 5, 2014 at 10:38 AM, ccollins9 <[email protected]> wrote: > 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]> 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 >> >> >
