Shared Mailbox Guide for NHSmail

Introduction – What is a shared mailbox?

Purpose of Document

Target Audience: NHSmail users who wish to set up a shared mailbox, and
Administrators who administer the shared mailboxes at their organisation.

A shared mailbox is the new terminology for what was previously referred to as a Generic Mailbox (GM). Just like a GM, a shared mailbox is a mailbox that is not associated with oneparticular user. It is usually accessed by multiple staff members from the same departmentor project for example. All staff who have access to the shared mailbox can send emails ‘onbehalf’ of the mailbox.

When and when not to use a shared mailbox

You should use a shared mailbox (previously known as a Generic Mailbox (GM) in the following circumstances:

  •  The same mailbox needs to be accessed by a number of team members. This can bevery useful for an organisation providing centralised services, such as a helpdesk or human resources.
  • To send individual patient appointment reminders via NHSmail – using a shared mailbox means the message to the patient is sent from a suitably named account rather than a person. Note applications cannot access shared mailboxes.
  •  If emails are managed by a team a shared mailbox is easier to maintain than a personal mailbox. If a team member is absent, the emails can still be managed effectively.
  •  The activity of a shared mailbox is tracked and kept for audit and security purposes; therefore, it is a secure way of providing a mailbox for multiple people to use. If a personal account is set up and login details shared with a number of people, there is no way of tracking who a particular email has been sent by.

Circumstances in which a shared mailbox should not be used:

  • Confidential data intended for one individual member only but sent from or received by the shared mailbox.
  • Access is required by applications or mobile phones

Shared mailbox requirements

Only an NHSmail Local Administrator can create a shared mailbox and initially set up permissions for users. A Local Administrator from the owning organisation can grant ‘Owner’ permissions to any user within their organisation. Once a user has ‘Owner’ permissions they can manage the shared mailbox within Outlook Web App.

Shared mailbox users with delegated access

Users of shared mailboxes with delegated access can manage shared mailboxes via
Outlook Web App. Shared mailbox users can edit the shared mailbox permissions if they are given ‘Owner’ permissions. When managing the shared mailbox permissions, users must ensure that only the correct staff have the appropriate access permissions. Users will manage shared mailboxes via Outlook Web App.

Shared mailbox facts

  • Only administrators can create shared mailboxes.
    It is possible for the members of a shared mailbox to set an Out of Office message for the mailbox.
  •  The ability to transfer shared mailboxes between organisations is a new feature of NHSmail.
  •  They do not have passwords so can be used to send automated messages without the need to maintain a password.

Naming a shared mailbox

Shared mailboxes should be named according to the following rules:

  • Shared mailbox names may contain alpha-numeric characters (a-z, A-Z, 0-9) and hyphens (‘-‘) and underscores (‘_’) and full stops (‘.’).
  • The mailbox name must not be greater than 40 characters (not including short org name) and cannot include a space.
  • The email address format for a shared mailbox will be shortorgname.smname@nhs.net, where ‘shortorgname’ is the short organisation name of the organisation that owns the shared mailbox and ‘smname’ is the name of the shared mailbox as provided by its creator.
  • There are no restrictions on the name you can choose but it must be prefixed with the short organisation name at all times. This is not optional.
  • An example is as follows: a user requests a shared mailbox called ‘helpdesksupport’ to be created under NHS England. This would be created as NHSDigital.helpdesksupport@nhs.net

How to access a shared mailbox

As well as accessing your shared mailbox over the Internet through the Outlook Web App (OWA), it can also be accessed through your Outlook Desktop client. To do this you need to configure Outlook with your NHSmail account that has been set up with permissions to access your shared mailbox. Instructions on how to do this can be found below.

In Outlook 2007:

  1. Open Outlook 2007
  2. Click Tools at the top of the window
  3.  Select Account Settings from the drop down list?
  4.  Double click your profile name in the table on the Email tab
  5.  Click More Settings at the bottom of the window
  6.  Select the Advanced tab
  7.  Click Add, type the name of the shared mailbox in the text box and click OK
  8.  Click OK, Next, Finish and Close

In Outlook 2010 and Outlook 2013:

  1. Open Outlook 2010/2013
  2. Click File on the top left side of the window
  3. Click the Account Settings button, and select Account Settings
  4. Select your Exchange account and click the Change button at the top of the window
  5. Click More Settings at the bottom right of the window
  6. Select the Advanced tab
  7. Click the Add button
  8. Type the name of the shared mailbox and click OK
  9. Click Apply, OK, Next, Finish and Close

You will now see your shared mailbox added into Outlook Desktop Client and displayed on the left hand menu. For more information on accessing shared mailboxes via Outlook Web App, refer to the Delegated and Shared mailboxes module located within the Outlook Web App Learning Series available on the Training and Guidance pages.

Shared mailbox permissions

Once a user has been given full access to a shared mailbox by their administrator they can then manage shared mailbox permissions in Outlook Web App. This means that users can give access to other users via Outlook Web App.

More information for administrators about granting permissions for a shared mailbox can be found in the Administering Shared Mailboxes section of the NHSmail Portal Administrator’s guide located within the Portal Learning Series.

Best Practices

  1. Always consider the usage of a Shared Mailbox – as they do not require a licence they are restricted to 50GB of storage which cannot be extended and no archive can be provisioned. They require management to stay with the allocated storage quota
  2. They should not be used to create Teams meetings – they are unlicenced for Teams (and cannot be licenced) and will cause multiple issues because they have no OneDrive account to save any recordings and difficulties in deleting recordings made by Shared Mailboxes.
  3. Always regularly review the users which have access to a Shared Mailbox and restrict access to the lowest practical number. There is no way of effectively identifying which user has read an email or identify who has responded other than using manual methods with Categories. There is no audit available for discovering who has read an email or moved it to another folder
Last Reviewed Date 27/10/2023
Updated on 27/10/2023

Related Articles

Need Support?
Can’t find the answer you’re looking for? Don’t worry we’re here to help!
Contact Support
back to top