Cool use of AI. For this task, I like to use a service that, instead of me presenting options, I just manage my calendar, and the recipient finds a time that works. For this, I use SavvyCal (http://aconn.me/savvycal). I've connected multiple calendars to it (most M365, some Google). Then I have different scheduling links.
For instance, coaching clients get lots of access, I only take sales calls on certain days of the week, and others are rate limiting, fixed durations (15/25/45 minute calls) or have automatic gaps added between blocks.
I just sent a link, and when they try to find time, they can optionally connect their calendar (Google/M365/Outlook) to find mutual availability and request a meeting. My availability is always shown as a union of all my calendars, and it's always live.
Cool use of AI. For this task, I like to use a service that, instead of me presenting options, I just manage my calendar, and the recipient finds a time that works. For this, I use SavvyCal (http://aconn.me/savvycal). I've connected multiple calendars to it (most M365, some Google). Then I have different scheduling links.
For instance, coaching clients get lots of access, I only take sales calls on certain days of the week, and others are rate limiting, fixed durations (15/25/45 minute calls) or have automatic gaps added between blocks.
I just sent a link, and when they try to find time, they can optionally connect their calendar (Google/M365/Outlook) to find mutual availability and request a meeting. My availability is always shown as a union of all my calendars, and it's always live.
Sadly at Microsoft all Graph APIs are disabled. So no way to get external calendar other than syncing to Apple Calendar.
Huh... I never realized that.