HappyGirl wrote:
> We figured out how to create 3 distribution lists and then use BCC to make
> sure the email addresses wouldn't show however we are receiving an email from
> ourselves and we weren't included in any of the distributions lists. Others
> are receiving them which was the main goal but we get an email and it's From
> us and To us. Is that automatic when we do a blind distribution list email?
As Roady suggests, a blank combo of To/Cc might not be allowed by your
unidentified e-mail provider (is this at work?). Since the Bcc ensures that
no recipients are listed, the result is the delivered e-mail has no e-mail
address as the recipient or the recipient's e-mail address is not included
in the To/Cc headers (i.e., the e-mail was not specifically addressed to
that recipient). Spam filtering (at the server or at the client via rules
or anti-spam software) can block such blank-recipient e-mails. E-mail
should always show that it was sent "to" someone even if all it does is to
identify the nature of the e-mail.
If, for example, you are sending a newsletter or bulletin, create a record
in your contacts folder with the name of your newsletter or bulletin as the
name of the person. In the e-mail address field, enter your e-mail address
(or whatever constitutes a legitimate reply e-mail address which is
monitored for those replies). Then add that contact in the To field.
Recipients will not see the other recipients specified in the Bcc field in
your e-mail client but will see something in the To header that helps them
identify why they received that e-mail (not all recipients will have a
preview pane enabled so all they see is the header list with To, From,
Subject, Date, etc).
Because you would be filling in the To/Cc header with your own e-mail
address (or your e-mail provider is doing it), and if you don't want those
items showing up in your Inbox, then use rules to move or delete them. You
can test on received e-mails where your e-mail address is both in the To/Cc
headers and in the From header. If it were a newsletter then there should
be sufficient text in the Subject to identify your own newsletter sent to
yourself and either move or delete it from the Inbox.
Otherwise, stop using a distribtion list in the Bcc field and leaving the
To/Cc headers blank and instead use MailMerge (an MS Word feature) or bulk
mailing program to send a separate copy of your bulk mail to each recipient.
Each recipient would be shown alone in the To/Cc header (so they don't see
the other recipients). Rather than send one copy of your e-mail to multiple
recipients and have the mail server slice out a copy of that one e-mail to
each recipient, you do the slicing on your end by sending a separate copy of
the e-mail to each recipient. The disadvantage would be you sending out
more e-mails, one for each recipient, which is slower than the mail server
sending out a duplicate to each recipient. The advantage is that you can
customized each copy of your e-mail, like adding the recipient's name inside
the message and other personal information to make it appear the e-mail was
sent to only that recipient.
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