
1.Save a few keystrokes when entering dates
When entering the start and due dates for a new task, you don't have to
type the entire date. If a date is in the current month, just enter the
day and Outlook will enter the rest of the date for you. For instance,
if the current month is March and you enter 14, Outlook assumes you mean
March 14 of the current year and fills in that date.
When a date isn't in the current month, you can still save a few
keystrokes by entering the month and day. Outlook will fill in the year
as follows:
If the month and day haven't occurred in the current year, Outlook uses the current year.
If the month and day have passed, Outlook uses the next year.
2.Control how you print notes
If you use the Notes feature to jot down questions, ideas, or quick
reminders, you might also want to print them occasionally. By default,
Outlook prints each note on a separate page, which might or might not be
what you want. You can force Outlook to fill each page, to save paper
or to keep related notes together. Select the notes you want to print
and then choose Print from the File menu. In the resulting Print dialog
box, deselect the Start Each Item On A New Page check box in the Print
Options and click OK.
If the option is disabled, you're using HTML format. You must switch to
plain or text format to enable this option. To do so, choose Options
from the Tools menu. Click on the Mail Format tab and choose Plain Text
from the Compose In This Message Format option's drop-down list. Then,
click Apply and OK. Repeat the print instructions, and you'll find the
Start Each Item On A New Page option is enabled. After printing the
notes, just retrace your steps to reset your format setting .
3.Print e-mail when it arrives
For a variety of reasons, some of us end up printing e-mail messages. If
you print most of your messages, or all of your messages from a
specific source, opening each message to print it manually interrupts
your work. Setting a rule to print the desired incoming mail might be
more efficient. To do so:
-
From the Tools menu, choose Rules And Alerts.
- Click New Rule on the E-mail Rules tab.
- Click Start From A Blank Rule at the top of the resulting Rules Wizard dialog box.
- In the Step 1 box, highlight the Check Messages When They Arrive option (it should be the default) and then click Next.
- In the Step 1 box, select the Where My Name Is In The To Box check
box (or whatever option applies, if you don't want to print all you
messages) and click Next.
- In the Step 1 box, click the Print It option and click Next.
At this point, you can identify exceptions to the rule, but we won't do
that here. Just click Next, and then Finish, Apply, and OK to return to
Outlook.
After setting up the new print rule, Outlook will print every incoming
message that meets your requirements. Now, the chances are that you
won't want to print every message. So make good use of the conditions
offered in steps 5 and 7 to limit the messages Outlook prints.
4.Store sent mail efficiently
When you reply to an e-mail, Outlook stores a copy of that message in
the Sent folder. If you're like me, your Sent folder has thousands of
messages. If you need to find a specific message later, you must sort
through all those messages, and that takes time. Instead, store your
replies with the original message. For instance, suppose you
automatically route all your messages from your boss into a folder
named, appropriately enough, MyBoss. If you want Outlook to store your
replies in MyBoss with the original messages, do the following:
-
From the Tools menu, choose Options.
- On the Preferences tab (which should be selected by default), click E-mail Options in the E-mail section.
- Click Advanced E-mail Options at the bottom of the Message Handling section.
- In the Save Messages section, select the In Folders Other Than The
Inbox, Save Replies With The Original Message check box and then click
OK three times to return to Outlook.
Outlook will apply this setting to all of your personal folders. Just
remember that Outlook saves replies with the original message and not in
the Sent folder only when the original message is in a folder other
than the Inbox. Outlook continues to save all replies sent from messages
in the Inbox in the Sent folder.
5.Create a Flags toolbar
Quick Flags help you categorize your messages, usually by some level of
importance or by task. For instance, you might use a red flag to mark
messages that need a quick response and a blue flag to mark messages on
which you've acted and are waiting for a response.
The problem with Quick Flags is that there's no way to customize their
descriptions. Outlook identifies them only by color. You can't change
the name of Red Flag to Critical. Remembering what each color represents
can become burdensome.
-
An easy way to remember what each flag represents is to create a
custom toolbar that displays each flag with text that means something to
you. Fortunately, the process is easy:
- From the Tools menu, choose Customize.
- On the Toolbars tab, click New and name the new toolbar appropriately (for instance, you might name it "Flags") and click OK.
- In the Customize dialog box, click the Commands tab.
- Select Actions from the Categories list box.
- Next, drag the appropriate flag color buttons from the Commands list
to the custom toolbar. (If you can't find the toolbar, look behind the
dialog box.)
- After adding all the flags you want, change the text for each flag
button. Right-click a flag button and replace the Name setting, e.g.,
&Red Flag, with something more helpful, such as "Critical." Select
the Image And Text option so that Outlook will display the button's name
on the toolbar.
- Complete steps 6 and 7 for each flag button in your new toolbar.
6.Modify the scope of your Calendar work week
By default, the Work Week calendar view displays the five days of the
traditional business week, Monday through Friday. To include Saturday
and Sunday in that view, choose Options from the Tools menu. In the
resulting Options dialog box, click Calendar Options in the Calendar
section. In the Calendar Options dialog box, check Sat and Sun in the
Calendar Work Week section. Then, click OK twice to return to the
Calendar.
You don't have to view a seven- or traditional five-day work week. Check
the days of the week that apply to you for a custom work week view. For
example, if you work Wednesday through Sunday, you can make those
selections to build a view that reflects your schedule.
7.Use color to identify messages from specific senders
Expecting important mail? Identify it as soon as it comes in by
displaying it in a distinctive color. Start by select an existing
message from the sender in question, if you have one. If you don't,
that's okay; you can enter the sender's name manually. Now follow these
steps:
1. In Mail, choose Organize from the Tools menu.
2. In the Ways To Organize Mail pane, click the Colors link on the left side.
3. In the first condition statement (we won't use the second), choose From in the first drop-down list.
4. If you chose a message before starting, the sender's name will appear
in the text box to the right. If it's the wrong name, enter the right
name or the person's e-mail address.
5. Choose a color from the second drop-down list.
6. Click Apply Color and close the pane.
Afterward, Outlook will display all messages, existing and new, from the
person you specified in step 4 in the color you selected in step 5.
8.Distinguish incoming mail from existing mail
By default, Outlook displays incoming mail as bold text until you read
it. If you need a bit more help, consider displaying unread mail in a
bright color. To do so, you'll work in a view, not a rule:
- In Mail, choose Inbox.
- Choose Arrange By from the View menu.
- Select Current View and then Define View from the subsequent submenus.
- In the Custom View Organizer dialog box, check the option and click Modify.
- Click Automatic Formatting.
- In the Automatic Formatting dialog box, click Font.
- In the Font dialog box, choose a color from the Color dropdown list, and click OK three times. Then, click Apply View.
Outlook will display all unread mail in the Inbox in the color you
choose in step 7. Doing so won't display unread messages automatically
routed to other folders. Since this is a view, it works only on the
current folder. However, you can set up a similar view for any folder
you like. In addition, the unread mail formatting takes precedent over
colors used to identify mail from a specific sender.
9.Force replies to reach multiple recipients
A problem arises when you need recipients to reply to everyone receiving
a message. The responding recipient must remember to click Reply All
instead of Reply. If the recipient forgets to click Reply All, you're
the only one who will see the reply, forcing you to forward it to
everyone else, which is inefficient. Before you send the message, you
can configure it to reply to everyone:
When composing the message, click the Options button on the Formatting toolbar.
-
Choose Options from the resulting drop-down list.
- In the Message Options dialog box, check the Have Replies Sent To
option in the Delivery Options section, which will automatically enter
your e-mail address.
- Next, click the Select Names button to the right and select all the appropriate recipients.
- Click Close to return to your message.
- When any recipient responds to the message, regardless of which reply
choice they click, the reply will go to everyone you specified in the
Have Replies Sent To option.
10.Create a temporary work week in the Calendar
The Work Week calendar view displays a week view, and you define what
constitutes a work week (see Tip #6). If you need to see more or less
than the usual work week, you can temporarily change that view. In the
Date Navigation pane, click the first date you want to view. Then, hold
down the [Shift] key and press the last date in the period. Outlook
automatically adjusts the Calendar Work Week to include all of the dates
in the selected time period. Alternately, you can view a group of
noncontiguous dates by holding down [Ctrl] instead of [Shift] as you
click dates. Outlook will display the days in order, regardless of how
you select them. source
Title : 10 tricks for Microsoft Outlook
Description : 1.Save a few keystrokes when entering dates When entering the start and due dates for a new task, you don't have to type the entire...