J
Josh Rolfe
Here is my scenario:
We have a Calendar for our accounting group. The calendar is a mailbox (an
AD user) with two delegates. One delegate is the supervisor over half of
the accounting group (we'll call them group A) and the other delegate is the
supervisor over the other half (group B). All appointments sent from either
group all need to end up in the one accounting calendar.
What I want to have happen is the meeting requests sent to the calendar by
the employees under supervisor A only get sent to Supervisor A, and vice
versa for group B. However, having two delegates sends all meeting requests
to both supervisors. If I could implement a rule on the supervisor A's
mailbox to delete messages sent to the calendar from group B, then that
would be good, but the options to implement this type of criteria don't seem
to exist.
I am looking for any way to accomplish this task. We have just moved from
GroupWise, where the appropriate supervisor was simply added as a CC
recipient of the appointment, which let him know he needed to "proxy" to the
accounting calendar and accept a meeting request, but didn't put it on his
calendar.
We have a Calendar for our accounting group. The calendar is a mailbox (an
AD user) with two delegates. One delegate is the supervisor over half of
the accounting group (we'll call them group A) and the other delegate is the
supervisor over the other half (group B). All appointments sent from either
group all need to end up in the one accounting calendar.
What I want to have happen is the meeting requests sent to the calendar by
the employees under supervisor A only get sent to Supervisor A, and vice
versa for group B. However, having two delegates sends all meeting requests
to both supervisors. If I could implement a rule on the supervisor A's
mailbox to delete messages sent to the calendar from group B, then that
would be good, but the options to implement this type of criteria don't seem
to exist.
I am looking for any way to accomplish this task. We have just moved from
GroupWise, where the appropriate supervisor was simply added as a CC
recipient of the appointment, which let him know he needed to "proxy" to the
accounting calendar and accept a meeting request, but didn't put it on his
calendar.