SendLater remembers your settings until you change them yourself.Īnother nice touch: clicking the little calendar icon in the SendLater pane gives you a fun pop-out, which lets you choose a date by clicking and a time by dragging the clock’s hands. Here’s a nice touch: no matter which option you choose, the next time you write an email and click the Send Later button, the options you chose last time are still there! So, if you want to send a bunch of emails over the weekend and have them go out at 8 AM Monday, you only have to choose “Next Working Day 8:00 AM” once. If you want to send the message at a certain time on the next working day, or at a certain time tomorrow, or at a certain time today, use the Special Date option. If you want to wait a few minutes, hours, or days from now, use the Time Distance option. If you want the message to go out on a certain day, at a certain time (I I do here), you use the Time and Date option. When you click the “Send Later” button you get options, as shown below. (This is the message I want to write today, and send in a week.) Here’s what an outgoing mail message looks like after you’ve installed SendLater: totally normal, with a “Send Later” button added. There are other ways to delay the sending of an email but in my experience, SendLater is the nicest way to do it.) SendLater adds a “send this email later” option to Apple’s Mail program, so you’ll still be using Mail, but with a new option. (Plug-ins add features and options to other programs. If you’re using Apple’s Mail app on a Mac, a Mail plug-in called SendLater gives you the power to do all of the above. Or, maybe you want to be sure you remember to send a Happy Birthday email to your friend on the 29th of November but you’re thinking of it on the 22nd.
Or, maybe you want your emails to be at the top of your recipients’ mailboxes the next business morning rather than buried under other messages that came in after yours, as it would be if you send it at night. Let’s say you send a lot of emails after business hours, because that’s when you have time to do it, but you don’t want the recipients knowing you’re working so late. Another way to send an email at a scheduled time: Mail Act-On, which is part of the Small Cubed MailSuite, USD $80 one-time payment (and you get a lot more than delayed sending with the MailSuite also).
Update 1-22-2021: SendLater is now part of MailButler, a subscription service, currently USD $8.95 per month when you pay for a year at a time (and you get a lot more than delayed sending).