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Our organization has a procedure that is beneficial to us but is also
very tedious and I'm hoping that by describing the process below, someone might be able to point out a simpler way to accomplish same, or if it will require custom programming. We utilize a Public Folder to store our company wide clients. By creating calendar entries in the Public Folder and assigning them to a Contact, we can open the Contact and see when the client was last in the office. Further, if we assign employee(s) to the calendar entry (with Invite Attendees), it allows us to see who the client saw. We also want the calendar entry on the personal calendar of the employee(s) involved in the appointment. So we need two calendar entries created, one on the public folder calendar, one on the private mailbox calendar. So right now, when a client requests an appointment, we follow these steps: 1. Check to see if the employee has an opening for the requested time by viewing their personal calendar (in their mailbox). 2. Open Public Folder Calendar, create new calendar entry 3. Enter information about the appointment 4. Click Invite Attendees for the employees that will be involved in the appointment 5. Click Contacts to assign the appropriate client Contact. Then an e-mail message is sent to the employee(s) asking them to accept the invitation, which places the calendar entry on their personal calendar. Is there a way we can eliminate several of these steps to create the two necessary calendar entries and eliminate the invitation step so that the employee doesn't have to accept the invitation for it to appear on their personal calendar? Our environment is Exchange 2003/Outlook 2003. Thank you, Wyn Bryant |
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Wyn,
Our product (@ www.ExchangeGroupCalendar.com) will make life a lot easier for you. With that, you create the item in the public folder and it automagically shows up in the personal calendar of the user. If the user changes the item it will change in the public folder too.. It has some more options which you may find useful. regards, John On Jul 29, 2:35*pm, Wyn Bryant wrote: Our organization has a procedure that is beneficial to us but is also very tedious and I'm hoping that by describing the process below, someone might be able to point out a simpler way to accomplish same, or if it will require custom programming. We utilize aPublicFolderto store our company wide clients. *By creatingcalendarentries in thePublicFolderand assigning them to a Contact, we can open the Contact and see when the client was last in the office. *Further, if we assign employee(s) to thecalendarentry (with Invite Attendees), it allows us to see who the client saw. *We also want thecalendarentry on the personalcalendarof the employee(s) involved in the appointment. So we need twocalendarentries created, one on thepublicfoldercalendar, one on the private mailboxcalendar. So right now, when a client requests an appointment, we follow these steps: 1. Check to see if the employee has an opening for the requested time by viewing their personalcalendar(in their mailbox). 2. OpenPublicFolderCalendar, create newcalendarentry 3. Enter information about the appointment 4. Click Invite Attendees for the employees that will be involved in the appointment 5. Click Contacts to assign the appropriate client Contact. Then an e-mail message is sent to the employee(s) asking them to accept the invitation, which places thecalendarentry on their personalcalendar. Is there a way we can eliminate several of these steps to create the two necessarycalendarentries and eliminate the invitation step so that the employee doesn't have to accept the invitation for it to appear on their personalcalendar? Our environment is Exchange 2003/Outlook 2003. Thank you, Wyn Bryant |
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You could use scripting to copy the item to the personal folder, but it may
not work well because it needs to copy to a different folder each time. I might do it this way: 1. Create a Group Schedule containing all the people who you choose from for these events. Use this, rather than opening the calendar. Provided they publish Free/busy, you'll see their availability. 2. If the requests come by email from the contact, drag the email to the PF calendar to create a linked appointment. Otherwise type their name in the contact field and let outlook resolve it. 3. Send the meeting request as you do now but have the users configure outlook to automatically accept appointments. If they don't want to accept every appointment automatically, use rules to autoaccept these. See http://www.slipstick.com/emo/2007/up071129.htm#3 -- Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook] Need Help with Common Tasks? http://www.outlook-tips.net/beginner/ Outlook 2007: http://www.slipstick.com/outlook/ol2007/ Outlook Tips by email: EMO - a weekly newsletter about Outlook and Exchange: Outlook Tips: http://www.outlook-tips.net/ Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com You can access this newsgroup by visiting http://www.microsoft.com/office/comm...s/default.mspx or point your newsreader to msnews.microsoft.com. "Wyn Bryant" wrote in message ... Our organization has a procedure that is beneficial to us but is also very tedious and I'm hoping that by describing the process below, someone might be able to point out a simpler way to accomplish same, or if it will require custom programming. We utilize a Public Folder to store our company wide clients. By creating calendar entries in the Public Folder and assigning them to a Contact, we can open the Contact and see when the client was last in the office. Further, if we assign employee(s) to the calendar entry (with Invite Attendees), it allows us to see who the client saw. We also want the calendar entry on the personal calendar of the employee(s) involved in the appointment. So we need two calendar entries created, one on the public folder calendar, one on the private mailbox calendar. So right now, when a client requests an appointment, we follow these steps: 1. Check to see if the employee has an opening for the requested time by viewing their personal calendar (in their mailbox). 2. Open Public Folder Calendar, create new calendar entry 3. Enter information about the appointment 4. Click Invite Attendees for the employees that will be involved in the appointment 5. Click Contacts to assign the appropriate client Contact. Then an e-mail message is sent to the employee(s) asking them to accept the invitation, which places the calendar entry on their personal calendar. Is there a way we can eliminate several of these steps to create the two necessary calendar entries and eliminate the invitation step so that the employee doesn't have to accept the invitation for it to appear on their personal calendar? Our environment is Exchange 2003/Outlook 2003. Thank you, Wyn Bryant |
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