Hi Thanks for your email. I’ll be away from the office until [MM/DD] and will respond as soon as I can. For all support requests/needs, please reach out to [email] and one of my colleagues will be happy to assist you.
Please note that all queries and orders posted at least [X] days before [starting date of the holidays] or during holidays will be processed immediately once we are back at the store.
.
Hi, I am out of the office for my annual year-end vacation and will not be able to check my mail until after the New Year. Have a Happy New Year!
If you’re looking for a classic OOO message, this one is for you. Perhaps you work an industry that values directness and getting straight to the point, and playfulness may be off-brand. This response covers all of the most important bits of information every OOO needs: the date you will return to the office, when they can expect a response back, and who to contact in the meantime. That’s it!
Our offices are closed until [date]. If it’s something you need urgent assistance with, contact [Name] on [phone number] or [Email] Hello! Thank you for your email. I am currently out of the office. We have closed for [holiday name]. I will be returning on [date]. If you require immediate assistance, you may reach me at – [mobile number]. Thanks!
I do typically come back to hundreds of emails, and I prioritize what to read – things from my boss/leadership are first, followed by communication from my direct reports. I also sort them by conversation thread and read the end of them first, which reduces the burden.
Many companies offer an escape option so that if a caller ends up in a staff member’s voice mailbox, he or she can “escape” out of the mailbox and go back to the attendant menu. Use a customized auto-attendant for this situation. If you would like to leave a voicemail, please press 1 and leave your name, number, and a brief message. If you would like to return to the main menu, please press the # key.
Setting up an out of office message in Gmail is simple. First, (1) put the message you wrote in the text box and format it properly. Then (2) choose a schedule for your auto-replies. If you know by which date you’re going to get back to the office, you can put that day in. Gmail will then automatically stop sending out auto-replies when the time comes. If you don’t know when you’re going to return you can leave it empty. Out of office replies can also be (3) manually toggled on or off at any time.
If you need immediate assistance before then, you may reach me at my mobile – (Mobile Number).
This is what I’ve seen most often in my career. Problem is, the contact is almost always the admin. I’m the admin. Everyone’s idea of assistance is different. Often, I didn’t have the knowledge about the issue in order to be of any assistance. I wound up spending more time running around looking for answers than actually working on what was on my own plate. It’s exhausting. Otherwise known as “please don’t call us for unicorn problems when we handle llamas. Literally, we can’t do anything for unicorn problems.”
Q. Will students who stay on campus during winter break be impacted by this change?
I personally like it. Of course, the emails that I’ve seen still say what to do if the matter is urgent and needs to be handled now — but as a person who gets 100+ emails a day, whether I tell you I’m deleting all of them when I get back or not — if it is in the thousands of emails that might accumulate in the time I am off, I’m not going to see it or respond. Better that I tell you now that you are going to have to resend the email after I return (or get my backup to handle it now) than you sit around waiting for a response that is never going to come. It is actually pretty common in my industry for any absence two weeks or more.
By submitting your comment, you expressly authorise FastComet to collect and process your personal data for the purposes of managing FastComet’s blog in accordance with our Privacy Policy. For avatars related with your comments we may use images provided through the Gravatar service. Shared Hosting Cloud VPS Hosting Dedicated Hosting SSL Certificates SiteBuilder Domains About Us SmartControl Panel Contact Us FastComet Reviews Partners & Vendors Company Blog 24/7/365 Support Website & Server Security Datacenters & Locations Uptime Commitment GoDaddy vs. FastComet WP Engine vs. FastComet InMotion vs. FastComet HostGator vs. FastComet Bluehost vs. FastComet Site5 vs. FastComet Arvixe vs. FastComet WordPress Hosting WooCommerce Hosting Magento Hosting OpenCart Hosting Joomla Hosting SocialEngine Hosting All Tutorials WordPress Tutorials Magento Tutorials OpenCart Tutorials WooCommerce Tutorial Knowledge Base To provide you with the best experience, our website uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site you are agreeing to our Cookie Policy. Our sites use tools, such as cookies, to understand how you use our services and to improve both your experience and our advertising relevance. Here, you can opt-out of such tracking: Social media features, such as the ‘Facebook Like/Share button’, Widgets or interactive mini-programs run on our site to incorporate social and customer feedback feeds. Some of them use cookies for behavioral analytics and advertising and/or market research. FastComet Live Chat support requires cookies for behavioral analytics needed to address pre-sales/support inquiries. Disabling this cookie will limit you from receiving assistance from the Customer Service team via FastComet's LiveChat services. We use digital tools, such as Google Analytics, to track web traffic and the effectiveness of our digital advertising outreach efforts. This helps us identify more relevant ads to consumers and to improve the efficiency of our marketing campaigns. Cookies required for essential services and functionality such as login forms, shopping cart integration, and access control. Without them, our website cannot function properly and we cannot provide any service. Opt-Out is not available.
I hate the overshare. It drives me nuts. I’ve seen a lot lately that say essentially “After this crazy year I’m spending some much needed quality family time with Jane and the kids doing abc.” yada yada yada. It seems like overkill and way too familiar. You’re spending time with your family-that’s not noteworthy. Just say I’m out this date though this date. Contact person if you have something urgent.
Out-of-office auto-replies that keep happening over and over on CC’ed email threads.
Thank you so much for your email. I love it already. It’s wrapped so nicely in its charming subject line that I just knew this message was going to be something special. Gifts like these just don’t come around every day.
A literary agent I follow told the story of a long argument her autoreply had with a would-be author. She’d set up the outbound email while out of town and apparently an author who queried her with his book took offense to it. He replied back in frustration that he didn’t get a personal response. Her autoreply sent back another automated message, which he then in increasing anger kept responding to.