Parker's Mailbox
~~Parker
Renaud, IT Manager, Colliers Keenan, Inc.
Delegating
Folder Access in Outlook
In
the last two issues of the newsletter, I have shown you two ways to share
information with others on your network. Today we will talk about
the third way - “Delegating”. The difference between delegating and
just giving someone permission to access to your folders is that
delegating is the only way to give someone “Send-on-behalf-of
privileges” or permission to respond in your name.
What
can a delegate do? A delegate has the same authority as someone to
whom you have given permissions, plus the added authority to respond in
your name. A delegate can be given access to the same six folders to which
you can give permissions.
To
name a delegate, go to Tools>Options and select the delegates tab. Once
you select a delegate, the following window will appear:

In
this window you can select the permission the delegate has in different
areas of Outlook. You can set one of four levels of authority for each
area.
-
None
- meaning your delegate has no access to this function.
-
Reviewer
- gives the authority to Read items.
-
Author
– can read and create items.
-
Editor
– Can read, create, and modify items.
Check
the box “Automatically send a message to delegate summarizing
these permissions” to give your delegate written confirmation. If you
have Private items in one of these folders, you can check “Delegate can
see my private items” if you wish to share them.
How
does your delegate access your folders? It is very easy in Outlook
2000:
-
Click
on File>Open>Other Users Folder.

-
Select
the name of the “other person” and the folder to which you have
access.
-
The
folder will then open in a new window.
To
send a message on behalf of the individual who made you their delegate:
-
In
Outlook, running under your own profile, display a new mail message.
-
Click
View>From Field. This will add the “From” field to the header
at the top of the message template.
-
Click
on the From field and select the name of the person on whose behalf
you are sending the message.

-
Type
the body of the message, fill in the Subject and Recipient’s
address, and click Send.
-
The
recipient will only see the name of the person on whose behalf the
message was sent in their Inbox Information Viewer. However, when the
message is opened, in the message header itself, the recipient will
see something such as “Terry Smith on behalf of Parker Renaud”.
The recipient is not misled as to the identity of the sender.
-
If
you attempt send a message from a user who has not made you a
delegate, the following message will appear:
If
you travel frequently, do not have reliable access to your corporate
e-mail on the road, and have a trusted assistant, it is good business
practice to make that assistant your delegate.
Parker Renaud is the one-man IT
department at Colliers Keenan where he manages 90 PCs on 5 servers.
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