
In his previous column, John Vanderaart told about his response to bubbles of unknown 06 numbers, this time he encounters a completely different problem: an e-mail address.
I have one thing walking … I have to arrange something for the works council (OR) of our company. To be precise: “Accommodation.” That is not a problem in itself, but the wife of one of the Works Council members is very pregnant when we start using that accommodation. The colleague’s request: “The Works Council training likes to be in the vicinity of wife and happily expected sprout.”
Of course you cannot ignore such a request. Only … he lives ‘somewhere on the IJsselmeer’ and I am not really known – apart from dog sports fields. The need that makes good is my brother -in -law (the contractor) who recently settled in Edam and that is also ‘somewhere on the IJsselmeer’. My brother-in-law knows someone in Edam again and he knows someone in Volendam again and he will put me in contact with another hospitality tiger who knows all the roads in the aforementioned regions.
Well, I just received an email from a lady who could just be that hospitality tiger. And now my problem comes: “Her e-mail drles.” Something with ‘Chantalbangkok’ and an unclear domain name in a distant country. Maybe I am too correct, but with such an e-mail address my alarm bells will ring.
Quite apart from the fact that I cannot include such an e-mail address in correspondence in which OR colleagues watch. I’ll watch out! The confidential adviser is then immediately contacted by cross-border, don’t you think?
Further investigation is desired, because it can also be that my brother -in -law is dressed in Lolbroek and joke. Maybe a construction trade
I have something against ‘wrong’ e-mail addresses. But maybe that’s something personal …