Is it possible to schedule an email to be sent at a pre-specified

E

Eric

Does anyone have any suggestions on how to schedule an email to be sent at a
pre-specified date and time?
Thanks in advance for any suggestions
Eric
 
E

Eric

Thank you very much for your suggestions
For Microsoft Outlook, I don't see Options under View. Do you have any
suggestions on how to display Option feature for Microsoft Outlook?
I look forward to your reply
Thank you very much for any suggestions
Eric
 
M

Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]

Outlook version?

--
Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]

Post all replies to the group to keep the discussion intact.
How to ask a question: http://support.microsoft.com/KB/555375


After furious head scratching, Eric asked:

| Thank you very much for your suggestions
| For Microsoft Outlook, I don't see Options under View. Do you have any
| suggestions on how to display Option feature for Microsoft Outlook?
| I look forward to your reply
| Thank you very much for any suggestions
| Eric
|
| "Michael Bauer [MVP - Outlook]" wrote:
|
||
||
|| Via View/Options you may set the date and time.
||
|| --
|| Best regards
|| Michael Bauer - MVP Outlook
||
|| : VBOffice Reporter for Data Analysis & Reporting
|| : Outlook Categories? Category Manager Is Your Tool
|| : <http://www.vboffice.net/product.html?pub=6&lang=en>
||
||
|| Am Sun, 6 Jul 2008 01:42:01 -0700 schrieb Eric:
||
||| Does anyone have any suggestions on how to schedule an email to be
||| sent at a pre-specified date and time?
||| Thanks in advance for any suggestions
||| Eric
 
J

John Blessing

Eric said:
Does anyone have any suggestions on how to schedule an email to be
sent at a pre-specified date and time?
Thanks in advance for any suggestions
Eric

If it is a one-off, you can specify a "do not deliver before", which is off
the View menu, Options (in Outlook 2003), or try our email scheduler
(http://www.repeatmail.com) which will allow you to send multiple individual
emails, html or plain text, with attachments, either as a one-off or
regularly at a specified time and interval. The recipients list can be drawn
from your Outlook Contacts, a plain text file,database or spreadsheet. It
also allows you to specify the interval between each send so as to avoid
triggering any spam limits on your account. Outlook is not needed to send.
Your machine needs to be switched on, but you don't even have to be logged
in. Works with Win 98/XP/2003/Vista

--
John Blessing

http://www.LbeHelpdesk.com - Help Desk software
http://www.room-booking-software.com - Schedule rooms & equipment
bookings http://www.lbetoolbox.com - De-Duplicates MS Outlook
http://www.repeatmail.com - schedule mass individual emails
 
E

Eric

Thank everyone very much for suggestions
I am using Outlook 2003, when I select the email - Inbox, there is no Option
under View, could anyone please tell me how to activate this feature under
Microsoft Outlook?
Thank everyone very much for suggestions
Eric
 
M

Michael Bauer [MVP - Outlook]

Open the e-mail, then click View/Options. If you use Word as e-mail editor,
you will find the Options button not under View but on the toolbar.

--
Best regards
Michael Bauer - MVP Outlook

: VBOffice Reporter for Data Analysis & Reporting
: Outlook Categories? Category Manager Is Your Tool
: <http://www.vboffice.net/product.html?pub=6&lang=en>


Am Sun, 6 Jul 2008 16:01:01 -0700 schrieb Eric:
 
E

Eric

Thank everyone for suggestions
There is options under tools pull-down menu, but there is no options under
view. Under the options, I cannot find any feature to set date and time.
Does anyone have any suggestions?
Thank everyone very much for any suggestions
Eric
 
B

Brian Tillman

Eric said:
Thank everyone for suggestions
There is options under tools pull-down menu, but there is no options
under view.

That's because you're not looking at the menu in the correct window. You
must use the Outlook editor, not Word, in order to see "Options" on the View
menu. If you're using Word, just click Options on the Standard toolbar.
Open that Options and you'll see "Do not deliver before" about two-thirds of
the way down the dialogue.
 
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