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An Email Policy for Your Employees
4. Receiving Emails
4.1 Set out who should read incoming emails.
- Generally, employees should read only their own emails (using their own passwords to access the system).
- Establish how you will handle emails sent to a general address you might have (eg
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). Assign responsibility for dealing with such emails and set up your technology so that only the relevant people can read them.
- The policy should also cover how incoming emails are handled when employees are absent (eg on holiday).
4.2 Set out your security procedures for dealing with viruses.
- Employees should follow the procedure for dealing with attachments.
4.3 Set a response time.
- You might stipulate that all incoming emails should be replied to, or at least acknowledged, within 24 hours. Depending on your industry, a faster response time may be more appropriate.
- Software can help you filter and prioritise emails.
4.4 Explain how emails should be handled when an employee is absent or leaves.
- A simple option is to use an auto-responder saying that the employee has left or how long the employee will be absent, and giving an alternative contact.
- If you choose a system where someone else checks the employee's emails, explain how personal emails will be handled.
4.5 Explain how unwelcome emails should be dealt with. For example:
- Ask employees to tell friends not to send them inappropriate emails.
- Delete junk emails (spam). It is not usually a good idea to respond to spam, even just to ask to be taken off a mailing list. A response confirms that the email has been sent to a live address.
4.6 Set out your policy on storing incoming emails (see 3.8).