Forum Discussion
Jerid
Jun 25, 2021Copper Contributor
Attack Simulator
Just from testing my department yesterday, the one thing I feared would happen, did. It “shotgunned” the email to everyone and within minutes I could hear people talking about it and asking if they g...
VasilMichev
Jun 25, 2021MVP
It's on the roadmap. https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/security-compliance-and-identity/announcing-exciting-updates-to-attack-simulation-training/ba-p/2455961
dmarquesgn
Sep 28, 2022Iron Contributor
Hi,
Looking at this topic right now and already read the article, and now preparing one simulation, there's still one question which is not clear for me.
I want to randomize the sending times, to avoid the "crowd" effect of everyone receiving at the same time. But if I define the start date as 1 of October for example and end date for 15 of October, how will the randomization of email sending happen?
Usually I leave the campaigns on a 15 days timeframe, to give enough time to any user which is on vacation for a week for example. But if the randomization occurs between the start date and end date, that may mean that some users will receive the email near the last days?
Thanks
Looking at this topic right now and already read the article, and now preparing one simulation, there's still one question which is not clear for me.
I want to randomize the sending times, to avoid the "crowd" effect of everyone receiving at the same time. But if I define the start date as 1 of October for example and end date for 15 of October, how will the randomization of email sending happen?
Usually I leave the campaigns on a 15 days timeframe, to give enough time to any user which is on vacation for a week for example. But if the randomization occurs between the start date and end date, that may mean that some users will receive the email near the last days?
Thanks