Email etiquette
Nov. 2nd, 2007 10:21 amPeople have recently started sending me Outlook meeting notifications. I assume that these are generated automatically when they put items into their Outlook calendar, and are primarily intended to talk to other Outlook calendars.
I don't use Outlook, so the notifications just come through as rather curt looking autogenerated messages.
My etiquette question is: does one reply to these messages, as if they had been sent by a person, or does one take them as machine-generated, and respond only if one cannot make the scheduled time?
I don't use Outlook, so the notifications just come through as rather curt looking autogenerated messages.
My etiquette question is: does one reply to these messages, as if they had been sent by a person, or does one take them as machine-generated, and respond only if one cannot make the scheduled time?
no subject
Date: 2007-11-02 02:26 pm (UTC)You may well find that the meeting request was initiated by that person anyway, either using the other person's Outlook or else by using delegated powers.
If you don't respond or acknowledge at all Outlook will show that you haven't done anything about the meeting, so people might think you're being rude and/or incompetent.
no subject
Date: 2007-11-02 02:54 pm (UTC)I don't particularly like Outlook and I just don't want to pay the absurd price of the damn thing just for this sort of feature - until recently, I was never asked to use it.
I've just recently had a flurry of them though, from people who clearly Know Not of other email clients. Pft.