Hello - when we launch a project from a template or switch the status from Planning to Current, or Current to Complete - do people with "Inherited Permissions" (because we have shared our portfolio with them) get those email notifications as well? Thanks!
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No, having inherited access to a project does not trigger any notifications about that project.
If someone with Portfolio access receives a project-related notification, it's because they are also on the project through some other method, like a task assignment, or because they own the Portfolio or Program to which the project was added.
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No, having inherited access to a project does not trigger any notifications about that project.
If someone with Portfolio access receives a project-related notification, it's because they are also on the project through some other method, like a task assignment, or because they own the Portfolio or Program to which the project was added.
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We've also been trying to track down similar notifications issues in our Workfront instance. We thought it could be 'inherited permissions', but after a little more digging it seems like it's the 'People' section of our main request queue project. Anytime one of our staff is assigned to a request, they are added back to the 'People' section of the request queue project. They then start getting notifications about that request queue (example, someone submits a new request and adds a document, they get a notification that a document has been uploaded).
Does this sound correct? Is there a way to prevent these types of notifications specifically?
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That is correct.
It sounds like your request queue is not configured to take full advantage of routing rules. Using routing rules is always advised. This allows you to make a queue broadly accessible to many/all users and depending upon the queue topic they select to submit their request, it is routed to a separate project that is privately managed by the working team.
For example, I publish a queue called "Software Support Requests" and create three queue topics: Microsoft, Adobe, and Zoom. I can create a routing rule for each of those queue topics that specify any inbound request is immediately routed to a separate project. If the user selected the Microsoft queue topic, their request gets routed to the separate project called "Microsoft Support Requests." With this setup, a user assigned to a request in Microsoft Support Requests will get added to that project's project team, but not be added to the project teams for Adobe Support Requests or Zoom Support Requests - those teams no longer need to work out of the same project or get notifications about one another's work.
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Thank you for the reply! We do use routing rules a bit in this case, the request comes in, in then assigned to an 'Intake Team', and then the request is assigned to a staff person, who then converts that request to a project. In your example wouldn't our staff still get notifications when someone makes a request to the initial project? The issue in our case is that when a staff person converts the issue into a project from 'Project Request Queue', they're added to the 'People' section again. They start getting unnecessary notifications like 'User X Uploaded a Document to Project Request Queue', the moment that user submits their initial request.
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