Delegate Access
Just as you might have an assistant who helps you manage your incoming paper mail, you can use Outlook with Exchange server e-mail accounts to give another person access to your Inbox and any other Outlook folder. The process of granting someone permission to open folders, read and create items, and respond to requests for another person is called Delegate Access.
You, the person granting permission, determine the level of access that you want to give the delegate. You can give a delegate permission to read items in your folders or to read, create, modify, and delete items. You can give a delegate permission to send and respond to e-mail messages on your behalf. The delegate can also organize meetings on your behalf and respond to your meeting requests and task requests.
Note If you want to use the Delegate Access feature, your e-mail must be delivered to your mailbox on the server, not to a Personal Folders file (.pst) on your hard disk.
Step 1: Grant delegate access permissions to someone
Grant delegate access to someone
- On the Tools menu, click Options.
- Click the Delegates tab.
What if the Delegates tab is missing?
If you don't see the Delegates tab in the Options dialog box, you need to install the add-in to use the Delegate Access feature.
- On the Tools menu, click Options.
- Click the Other tab.
- Click Advanced Options, and then click Add-In Manager.
- Select the Delegate Access check box, and then click OK.
Note To add multiple delegates simultaneously, hold down CTRL and click names in the Name list. The permissions that you select apply to all of the delegates.
The Delegate Permissions dialog box should appear.
- By default, the delegate is not allowed to see private items. To allow the delegate access to the items that you mark as private, select the Delegate can see my private items check box.
Note Author or Editor access allows the delegate to also read e-mail messages. You can remove this ability by clearing the Read items check box. However, to allow the delegate to respond to meeting requests, you must allow Read access.
Do you already see the delegate's name? You might have selected the Inbox, not Mailbox - user name.
- On the Permissions tab, click Add.
- Type the name of your delegate or select it from the Name list. Click Add.
- To add the name to your permissions list, click OK.
- On the Permissions tab, next to Permission Level, you must select, at minimum, Nonediting Author.
You can also select Author, Publishing Author, Editor, Publishing Editor, or Owner.
Step 2: Act as the delegate
Open someone else's mailbox
- On the Tools menu, click E-mail Accounts.
- Click View or change existing e-mail accounts, and then click Next.
- Select your Exchange account, and then click Change.
- Click More Settings, and then click the Advanced tab.
- Under Mailboxes, click Add, and then type the person's mailbox that you want to add.
Note The mailbox name is usually the person's full name.
- Click OK, click Next, and then click Finish.
On the Tools menu, click E-mail Accounts.
The delegate's name is in the Add mailbox field.
The other person's mailbox appears in the Navigation Pane under All Mail Folders or in the Folder List under All Folders.
Send e-mail on behalf of someone else
- On the File menu, point to New, and then click Mail Message.
Note Even though you can click From and select any name from the Global Address Book, you are allowed to send a message only on behalf of someone who has granted you that permission.
- In the From box, type the name of the person you are sending on behalf of. If you leave the box blank, the message is sent from you.
Note If you do not see the From box above the To and Cc boxes, do the following: In the message window, on the E-mail toolbar, click the arrow on the Options button, and then click From. If you are not using Microsoft Office Word 2003 as your default editor, in the message window, on the View menu, click From Field.
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