What Is an Email Redirection?
Redirection is a special case of an email forward. In a standard forward, the person forwarding the message appears to be the sender. In a redirection, the message appears to come from the original sender. For example, if bob@xyz.com receives a message from sally@abc.com, and Bob forwards it to his colleague fred@xyz.com, it appears to Fred as a forward from Bob. However, if Bob redirects Sally’s message, it looks as if it came from Sally directly.
How Can I Redirect a Message?
One exception is Mozilla Thunderbird. It doesn’t support redirection natively. However, it supports add-ons that include this capability. But unlike The Bat!, which inserts a redirect-from header, Thunderbird add-ons rewrite the sender line to indicate the redirecting sender, but on behalf of the original sender. This functionality mimics a pure redirection, but imperfectly.
Can I Redirect All Messages?
Some modern programs support rules-based redirection. For example, the desktop version of Microsoft Outlook supports custom rules that allow for mail meeting specific criteria to be automatically redirected to a different user. Although these rules apply without end-user intervention—meaning, you can’t individually redirect messages—it’s a great tool for redirecting classes of messages. For example, an Outlook rule can redirect messages from a generic inbound account to a specific user.