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From: Leonard on 18 Feb 2010 16:45 Hi, our company has two domain names. We use Outlook and Exchange. Email users at our company hava one mailbox, but two email addresses (for example: janedoe(a)abc.com and janedoe(a)123.com). When they send an email, by default Outlook uses one of the two email address. We would like the user to be able to choose what email address they would like to use when they compose an email, for example user Jane Doe may want to use janedoes(a)abc.com to send email to recipient A, but would like to use janedoes(a)123.com to send email to recipient B. I am looking for information on how to configure Outloook/Exchange to allow us to do that. Can you point me to the right direction?
From: VanguardLH on 18 Feb 2010 17:00
Leonard wrote: > Hi, our company has two domain names. We use Outlook and Exchange. Email > users at our company hava one mailbox, but two email addresses (for example: > janedoe(a)abc.com and janedoe(a)123.com). When they send an email, by default > Outlook uses one of the two email address. We would like the user to be able > to choose what email address they would like to use when they compose an > email, for example user Jane Doe may want to use janedoes(a)abc.com to send > email to recipient A, but would like to use janedoes(a)123.com to send email to > recipient B. I am looking for information on how to configure > Outloook/Exchange to allow us to do that. Can you point me to the right > direction? For new e-mails, Outlook uses the default account (hence why it's called the "default"). Outlook always has a default account. For replies, Outlook uses the same account through which the original e-mail was received. To switch, the users uses the Accounts button so what you asked for is already there. There is no "Prompt me everytime as to which account to use" option. You could have your users define a bogus e-mail account in Outlook which cannot connect to a mail server. Make that account the default one. Since Outlook cannot connect to that bogus mail server, they get an error message. The user will then have to resend that e-mail and select one of the real accounts through which to send their e-mails. Of course, if the user used teh Accounts button beforehand then they don't get the error and don't have to twice attempt to send their e-mail. After having to repeatedly resend their e-mails and selecting a real account, they'll learn to use the Accounts button every time they send an e-mail. Babies and tots learn through pain. So do adults. |