--- title: "Who answers? Clarifying email responsibility within the team" description: "Answered twice or not at all: why team mailboxes fail due to unclear responsibility and how to cleanly settle accountability and visibility." type: "wissen" product: "mail" slug: "team-email-responsibility" source_language: "de" target_languages: ["de", "en", "es", "pl", "tr"] published: "2026-06-10" status: "publish" faq_json: [{"q":"Why do emails in team mailboxes remain unanswered?","a":"Because of diffusion of responsibility: when several people see an email, everyone relies on someone else answering. The problem isn't laziness, but a lack of arrangement about who is responsible."}, {"q":"How do you prevent duplicate replies from a shared mailbox?","a":"Through a shared working environment instead of five private copies of the same mailbox – and through the rule that one person per mailbox is responsible for handling it and hands over inquiries explicitly."}, {"q":"What does responsibility for a mailbox mean concretely?","a":"The responsible person ensures that incoming emails are reviewed, assigned, and handled. They don't have to answer everything themselves – but with them, everything that's open comes together."}, {"q":"Should everyone in the team see all mailboxes?","a":"No, visibility should be granted deliberately for each mailbox: info@ usually organization-wide, sensitive mailboxes like bewerbung@ only for a narrow circle. Visibility and answering responsibility are separate arrangements."}, {"q":"How does webRichtung mail support clarifying responsibility?","a":"The organization's mailboxes are connected centrally in core; for each mailbox, responsible persons and visibility are set – organization-wide or privately/directly shared. The team works from a common state instead of with shared passwords."}] language: "en" source_id: "wissen/team-email-verantwortung" source_hash: "f1587dd3481673ba033adb311db0855b3fea3febf254aca0fd70b2c6cc8c2dc4" --- When emails to team addresses get answered twice or not at all, it's rarely down to the people, but rather to a missing arrangement: for each mailbox, it must be clear who is responsible for handling it and who is allowed to read along. These two arrangements – responsibility and visibility – solve most of the problem. ## Diffusion of responsibility: the actual problem The phenomenon is well known: the more people see a task, the less the individual feels responsible. In the team mailbox, this means concretely: four people read Tuesday's customer inquiry – and each thought someone else would take care of it. Conversely, the same ambiguity leads to duplicated work: two colleagues answer the same email in parallel, and the customer receives two different answers. Both have the same root: **being able to see** was arranged (everyone has the password), **being responsible** was not. ## Two separate arrangements The key is to keep apart two questions that are constantly mixed up in practice: 1. **Who is responsible?** Exactly one person per mailbox (plus a deputy). They don't necessarily answer everything themselves – but they review, assign, hand over, and ensure that nothing is left lying around. With them, everything that's open comes together. 2. **Who is allowed to see it?** This is a deliberate decision per mailbox: info@ usually tolerates organization-wide visibility – this helps with cover and context. Mailboxes like bewerbung@ or buchhaltung@ belong to a narrow circle. In [webRichtung mail](https://www.webrichtung.de/module/mail/), these two arrangements are exactly the core of the model: your organization's mailboxes are connected centrally in core under Administration → Integrations, and for each mailbox you set **responsible persons** and **visibility** – organization-wide or privately/directly shared. Instead of five private copies with a shared password, the team works from a common state. ## Handover instead of silent forwarding Responsibility only works with a clean handover. Silent forwarding – pushing the email to the specialist colleague and hoping – is the most common breaking point: the colleague takes it as information, not as a task. Better is the explicit handover with three elements: - **Recipient:** "Can you take this on?" to a specific person, not to a distribution list - **Expectation:** What should happen – answer, check, report back? - **Deadline:** By when? Even a rough "this week" is better than nothing. Only once the colleague has taken it on has responsibility moved – until then it lies with the person responsible for the mailbox. ## Ground rules that have proven themselves 1. **One email, one owner:** As soon as someone takes on an inquiry, it belongs to them – including follow-up questions and chasing it up. 2. **Define response time:** The team agrees on a response time for initial replies. Even an honest interim message counts. 3. **Done means done:** Processed cases are made recognizable as such so that no one touches what's already finished again. 4. **Arrange cover before vacation:** Responsibility that goes on vacation is the second most common cause of inquiries left lying around. ## The effect Teams that have explicitly settled responsibility and visibility per mailbox report an unspectacular but noticeable effect: the question "Has anyone actually answered that?" disappears from everyday life. How to lay the organizational foundation for this is described in the article [Organizing a shared mailbox in the team correctly](/en/wissen/gemeinsames-postfach-team.html).