Forum Discussion
henrikblaesing
Apr 18, 2024Copper Contributor
When cancelling a meeting, the option for not notifying participants is gone
The new Outlook (Microsoft 365) is no more offering the option for not notifying participants when cancelling a meeting. Problem description: In the past, when I scheduled a meeting with 1 other per...
nola
Jul 24, 2024Copper Contributor
It's ridiculous that this feature is gone.
I have found a solution to this to avoid making myself look like a dunce.
Open Outlook. Select "Send/Receive" at the top left. Select "Work Offline." When that box is highlighted, you are offline.
Go to the calendar event. Cancel the meeting and send the cancellation. Now go to your Outbox and delete the cancellation message. Voila.
Now you can go back online.
I have found a solution to this to avoid making myself look like a dunce.
Open Outlook. Select "Send/Receive" at the top left. Select "Work Offline." When that box is highlighted, you are offline.
Go to the calendar event. Cancel the meeting and send the cancellation. Now go to your Outbox and delete the cancellation message. Voila.
Now you can go back online.
Kenny_Chau
Jul 31, 2024Copper Contributor
Tried this, but removing the outbox message will not remove the meeting from others' calendars in fact. I also tried to cancel the meeting via Teams, there will still be a cancellation email sent to the attendees.
Haven't found a good way to cancel without notifying everyone yet..
Haven't found a good way to cancel without notifying everyone yet..
- nolaAug 01, 2024Copper ContributorWow. All it did was remove the meeting from my calendar. That is really sad and unfortunate. Thanks for letting me know. I guess the people who developed Outlook, don't use Outlook.
- JayLJun 10, 2025Copper Contributor
The whole point was to remove a meeting that was declined by the other participant from your own calendar without sending a further cancelation notice as the other participant has declined. That you have to jump through hoops to do this is crazy. That the new Outlook interface has no easy way to go offline makes it even more necessary to remain on the older version to be able to continue to work-around removal of a useful function.