Tread lightly

Gee I didn’t post anything yesterday. You’d think I was majorly busy or something wouldn’t you?

I do have to come up with a way to recommend people stop doing something in Outlook. You see every week, I write up a “Tip of the Week” and send it out to all of our staff. Mostly it covers PC, database and other techie tips. This week I have finally decided it’s time to say something about those people who use the “deleted items” folder in Outlook as a holding bin for stuff instead of creating new folders and filing items away.

Of course, any time you tread into the area of telling people how they should use email, you are best advised to tread lightly. People live and die by email, (At least they feel like they do) and trying to convince them to do something differently is usually a fool’s errand. On the other hand, I’m sure the tech support people can vouch for me that accidentally deleting something from any other folder and accidentally deleting something from the deleted items folder are two very different animals, and these folks who keep their email stored in that folder, inevitably, will delete something by accident! Since we do not have an email server, we use POP3 for internet and MS Postoffice for internal, once you delete something permanently, it is gone for all intents and purposes. There are no server copies of email. It’s all stored locally unless the user was bright enough to backup their .pst file to the file server on a regular basis. At this writing I have 2 people doing that, and I’m one of them, despite numerous recommendations.

Given the response to those recommendations, my fear of offending people is probably overblown. People are going to do what they want when it comes to handling email, there’s not much I can do but throw out recommendations and hope one or two of them actually follow them!

I wonder if other tech support folks have found email to be a highly touchy subject with users? I wonder if it’s because people see their business email, wrongly, as a private, personal thing?

Similar Posts

  • PocketPC work

    We spent the past weekend having an early Christmas with the in-laws. My father-in-law has recently had his Palm die on him and was given a Toshiba e310 that his son had and wasn’t using to replace it. I knew he was having some problems with it, and went in thinking that I was probably…

  • Three Risks of Skimping on Training

    From a Fool With a Tool is Still a Fool: How many companies pony up the money for effective training? Very few, which explains why so many companies waste money on newfangled tools that never deliver their promised results. I’ve seen this first hand, over, and over. Here are a couple of risks you take…

  • Knoppix

    Oh yeah the Knoppix CD has been burned and I did do a quick boot using it on my work machine, just to make sure I had a good CD. The setup didn’t find any soundcard. I’ve yet to have any Linux install configure the integrated audio on any of my PC’s that have that….

  • | | |

    Random Questions

    Because I’ve been thinking about these things… Does anyone view this site from a mobile device? Would it be worth it to try and create a mobile feed, or does the Feedburner feed work well enough in a mobile device? If not, any suggestions on a mobile feed service that won’t add advertising and doesn’t just…

  • Blogging as public speaking

    Aaron has posted a few thoughts, comparing his efforts to improve on public speaking to the efforts on improving his writing via his weblog. It’s an interesting comparison because in some ways they are similar. When you speak publicly you are using words to communicate thoughts and ideas to people, trying to educate, persuade, and…

  • Good morning!

    Yup, back at work today, migraines are all gone! Had to wade through some emails this morning, but nothing that was pressing, or even that important. A request for a little change in the telephone system programming was about the only thing that needed tending to right away, and that was a fairly easy change….

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)