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Small Group Manager Email woes

Last post 05-09-2008, 4:07 PM by Matthew McMaster. 1 replies.
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     10-17-2007, 12:59 PM 8909

    Small Group Manager Email woes

    We have introduced the small group manager feature of F1 with great enthusiasm, and gotten some hesitation from our leaders. Some feedback has been that they don't want to enter the year for people's birthdays (which sounds pretty silly to me).But the troubling one is that there have been 3 different people now telling me that they're having trouble with the email part of it. One said they compose a message and send and it doesn't get sent - or at least the people don't receive it. The others have said that it times out and they have to log-in again before they get a chance to send it, which means they have to start over again on the message. Just wondering if anyone else has heard similar feedback and if this is a program thing or a people thing (maybe they aren't doing it correctly - I don't know). Thanks.

     05-09-2008, 4:07 PM 10864 in reply to 8909

    Re: Small Group Manager Email woes

    I can see you posted this message a while ago and I am sorry we are just responding now.  I think the issue of timing out when emails are being written in the Small Group Manager has been fixed.  The issue of people not receiving the emails could be that it is going into their junk email folder.  Be sure that when they send out a group email they all look in their junk folder and then mark the email address it came from as a safe sender.  This will fix that issue unless the email address is wrong in Fellowship One. 

    As far as the DOB issue goes I would have to say that DOB is a critical field from a database perspective.  It will allow you to know your congregation, know that John Smith is in fact the same John Smith that is in the database 3 times, you can send age specific invitations to events for 20 somethings or seniors, and you can do some cool things with check in when you know someone's age.  

    I don't want to be too general here but there is a certain demographic (women ages 35-60) that have a problem with giving out their birth year.  There are also people that say it is a security risk.  Our data is very secure and certain people should be very happy that God has let them hang around for 35-60 years.  

    Regards,

    Matthew McMaster 


    Matthew McMaster
    Delivery Manager
    Fellowship Technologies
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