1 / 57

An Introduction to Outlook 2010

An Introduction to Outlook 2010. From the Center for Professional Development. Relevant SkillPort Courses :. In SkillPort : Catalog > Course Curricula > English > Desktop Curricula > Microsoft Office 2010 > Microsoft Office 2010: Beginning Outlook 2010.

byron
Download Presentation

An Introduction to Outlook 2010

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. An Introduction to Outlook 2010 From the Center for Professional Development

  2. Relevant SkillPort Courses: In SkillPort: Catalog > Course Curricula > English > Desktop Curricula > Microsoft Office 2010 > Microsoft Office 2010: Beginning Outlook 2010 • Getting Started with Outlook 2010 • Managing Conversations and Organizing Email in Outlook 2010 • Managing Attachments, Graphics, Signatures and Auto Replies in Outlook 2010 • Using the Calendar for Appointments, Events, and Meetings in Outlook 2010 • Managing Meetings and Customizing the Calendar in Outlook 2010 • Working with Contacts in Outlook 2010 • Using the Tasks, Notes and Journal Features in Outlook 2010

  3. The Interface Explained SkillPort course: Getting Started with Outlook 2010

  4. Navigation • The Ribbon: Similar to other Microsoft Office products the Outlook email client has the ribbon navigation at the top of the interface. The tabs on the ribbon provide access to specific functions associated with each tab group.

  5. Mail Area • By default the mailbox opens in Mail mode. • Below and to the left of the ribbon is the Mailbox navigation pane. ‘Favorites’ provides quick filtering of mail items for inbox items, unread mail, sent mail and deleted items. Below ‘Favorites’ is the title to your personal mailbox and access to your mailbox folders and areas. Mailbox navigation pane

  6. Mail Area At the very bottom of the pane is area access within the mailbox including Mail, Calendar, Contacts and Tasks. Clicking on each of these selections changes the ribbon and navigation pane to functions and tools associated with that area. This navigation is consistent throughout the mailbox areas.

  7. Mail Area In the Mailbox to the right of the navigation pane is the inbound mail column. Here you will see incoming mail items categorized by your selection of filtering. The selection shown is Today and Older. To the right of the inbound mail column is the mail reading pane. When you select a mail item you will view the item in this pane. Inbound mail column Mail reading pane

  8. Mail Area To the far right in the Mailbox is a small monthly calendar pane to review and look up dates. Below it a task pane displays tasks on your calendar. Calendar Pane Task Pane

  9. Calendar Area In the calendar area the ribbon provides access to calendar functions like appointments, meetings, different views of the calendar and other calendar functions.

  10. Calendar Area The calendar navigation pane provides access to a small monthly calendar to review and look up dates. Below the calendar is My Calendars which provides you access to all of the calendars you have created or that have been shared with you. Outlook allows you to create more than one calendar in your mailbox. Calendar navigation pane

  11. Calendar Area The calendar reading pane provides views of your calendar that can be changed by making selections in the Arrange group of the ribbon. Calendar reading pane

  12. Contacts Area In the contacts area the ribbon provides access to contact functions like new contact, new contact group, and share contacts. The contact navigation pane provides access to My Contacts. Click on contacts to view all contacts. Contacts navigation pane

  13. Contacts Area The Contacts area, similar to the Mailbox area, has a small monthly calendar pane to review and look up dates and a task pane that displays tasks on your calendar. Calendar Pane Task Pane

  14. Task Area In the task area the ribbon provides access to create new tasks, to categorize tasks, to prioritize tasks, and more. The Task navigation pane provides access to To-Do lists and Tasks. Click on either to view all items To-Do or to filter tasks. Tasks navigation pane

  15. Task Area In the task area to the right of the navigation pane is the task list column categorized by Today and Later. Flags can be set to prioritize tasks in the list. To the right of the task list column is the task reading pane. When you select a task you will view the item in this pane. Task list column Task reading pane

  16. Task Area To the far right of the viewing pane is a small monthly calendar pane to review and look up dates and a task pane that displays tasks on your calendar. Calendar Pane Task Pane

  17. Basic Mail Area Features SkillPort course: Managing conversations and organizing email in Outlook 2010

  18. Create a New E-mail To create a new email select New E-mail from the New group on the Home tab. Use the To: button to access the address book and select recipients. Complete your subject and message then click Send to execute the email.

  19. Inbound Mail To read an email, select it from the inbound mail column and it will open in the reading pane to the right. Delete, Reply, Reply All and Forward email using the Delete and Respond groups. Inbound mail column Reading pane

  20. Viewing Mail You can change your view of the inbound mail column by using the View tab in the Mail area. Inbound mail can be arranged by Date, From, To, Categories, or Flags. Click the selection in the Arrangement group under the View tab to change to inbound mail column. Inbound mail column

  21. Viewing Conversations You can view mail by conversations. Use the View tab and check ‘Show as Conversations’ in the conversation group. Use Conversation Settings to select how the conversation is displayed.

  22. Creating Folders and Moving Mail Create a folder by right-clicking on the inbox and select New Folder. You can move email into folders you have created for organization. Select the email to move, from the inbound mail column, then select the Move button in the move group. Folders you have created with be listed alphabetically.

  23. Color Categorizing You can organize emails by designating a color category for emails of a specific subject or issue. This provides a quick visual tool for filtering emails.

  24. Categorizing by Flags Flagging emails provides a way to create reminders for responding to emails and flagged emails appear in your daily to-do list at the right side of the mail interface. To flag an email, right click on the flag in the inbound mail column and select when to respond. Select a reminder from the dropdown list to set a reminder. This can also be done by selecting the Follow Up button in the Tags group. Inbound mail column

  25. Attachments, Signatures, Auto Replies and Mail Delivery Options SkillPort course: Managing Attachments, Graphics, Signatures and Auto Replies in Outlook 2010

  26. Viewing Attachments Attachments are indicated by a paper-clip symbol in your inbound mail list. Double-click the attachment in the reading pane to open the attachment tools dialog box. You can choose to Open, Print, Save As or Save All Attachments if there is more than one.

  27. Sending Attachments Use the Insert tab in the New E-mail dialog box for attachments. Use Attach File to browse to a file. Use Outlook Item to attach other emails in your mailbox. Use the Business Card selection to attach contacts information. Use Calendar to attach views of your calendar from one day to one month. Use Signature to select a different signature from the one set as the default.

  28. Your Email Signature To create your email signature, select New E-mail from the Home tab in the Mail area. In the E-mail dialog box click Signature and select Signatures from the dropdown menu. Outlook lets you create multiple signatures so that you can have a different signature for specific audiences. E-mail dialog box

  29. Your Email Signature From the Signatures and Stationary dialog box select New. Give the signature a name. Then use the edit signature textbox to create the text of the named signature. Use the Choose default signature area to select your default signature.

  30. Insert Images Use the Insert tab in the New E-mail dialog box for inserting images and hyperlinks. Click on the Picture button in the Illustrations group to browse and insert an image. Click on the Hyperlink button to insert a hyperlink into your email.

  31. Delivery Options Use the Options tab in the New E-mail dialog box for delayed delivery and priority settings. Select Delay Delivery from the More Options group. Use the Settings area to set priority: high, normal or low. Use the Delivery Options area to set delayed delivery of emails.

  32. Auto Replies To create an automatic response email for Out of the Office /Vacation (Rules) you first create an email. From the inbox select New E-mail. Complete the Subject and email text of the email message. Then click the File tab in the email message dialog box. Auto Replies are a three step process: Create the email reply Save As an Outlook Template Deploy the Rule

  33. Auto Replies Select Save As from the File tab. In the Save As dialog box give the message a file name and select Outlook Template as the Save as type. When you select Outlook Template as the Save as type the Save In at the top of the dialog box will default to the Templates folder. Click Save.

  34. Auto Replies To deploy a rule select Rules from the Home tab of the Mail area. Select Create Rule from the dropdown menu. At the Create Rule dialog box select Advanced Options button.

  35. Auto Replies Be sure to check ‘where my name is in the To or Cc box’ from the conditions list in the Rules Wizard. You can make other selections as well, but this selection will insure all mail items coming To you or Cc to you will get the auto reply. Then click Next.

  36. Auto Replies Step 1: Select action(s), check ‘reply using a specific template’. Step 2: Click the a specific template link and select User Templates in File System from the Look In: dropdown menu. Select the email message you saved as a template. Click Open and then click Next at the following dialog box.

  37. Auto Replies At the exceptions dialog box select any exceptions that may pertain or click Next if there are no exceptions. Name the rule and check Turn on this rule if you want to activate the rule at this time. You can choose to create the rule and activate at another time, which is shown in the next step. Click Finish to complete the rule.

  38. Auto Replies Once a rule has been created use Manage Rules and Alerts to activate, deactivate, change or delete the rule. A check next to the rule indicates that the rule is active. Uncheck the rule to deactivate. Then click Apply.

  39. Calendars and Appointments SkillPort course: Using the Calendar for Appointments, Events, and Meetings in Outlook 2010

  40. Calendar In Outlook there are three types of calendar events. Appointments, Meetings and Events. Appointments are activities that you schedule in your calendar that do not involve inviting other people or reserving resources. Type an appointment directly into the calendar date at the correct time or use New Appointment from Home tab in Calendar View.

  41. Appointments In the New Appointment dialog box, set the appointment to show as Free, Tentative, Busy, or Out of Office. Use Recurrence to setup as a recurring appointment. You can include a reminder time. Private can hide details of appointment no matter who has shared (proxy) access to view your calendar. When complete click Save and Close.

  42. Events Events are items that are all day and can be over several days. Create an event two ways: click in the calendar header to create an event or Home tab > New Items and select All Day Event. Calendar Header

  43. Meetings A meeting is an appointment that includes other people and can include resources such as conference rooms. Responses to your meeting requests appear in your Inbox. To create a meeting, select New Meeting from the Home tab New group.

  44. Meetings In the meeting dialog box click the TO: button to select attendees from the address book. Enter the subject in the meeting dialog box. Use the ROOMS button to select room resources for the meeting. Do a busy search of all attendees by clicking on Scheduling Assistant.

  45. Busy Search In the Scheduling Assistant the meeting time is indicated by a green line for start time and a red line for stop time. Each individuals availability will display on the schedule. Suggested times (right) show no conflicts for the time you selected at the bottom of the dialog box. Attendance status can be viewed for any meeting in the Scheduling Assistant. Deactivate the checkbox next to attendees name to remove them from list. Use time slots at bottom of scheduling assistant to change date and time for the meeting. Click Send when you are ready to execute the meeting appointment.

  46. Changing a meeting You can change a meeting by double-clicking on the meeting in the calendar view. Adjust the meeting time, date, etc. Click Send Update. Change an Appointment to a Meeting Change an appointment to a meeting by double-clicking the appointment in the calendar view. Then select scheduling assistance to add attendees and room location. The appointment will automatically be changed to a meeting.

  47. Accepting Meetings You can respond to a meeting as: Accept, Tentative, Decline, Propose New Time and Respond. You can accept in three ways: Choose to Edit the Response before Sending – add your message to the response. Choose Send the Response Now – accept without adding a personal response. Do not Send a Response – will add the meeting to your calendar but will not notify meeting organizer of your attendance status.

  48. Propose New Time You can tentatively accept or decline a meeting and propose a new time for the meeting. Use the schedule grid, AutoPick or Meeting Start and Ends time to propose a new time. AutoPick will search for the next meeting time that all attendees are available and allows you to propose it as a new meeting time. Click the Propose Time button. Click the Send button at the meeting mail request. The meeting organizer can choose to accept or decline the proposed meeting time.

  49. Accepting Proposed New Time When you accept a new proposed meeting time a Send Update email will automatically allow you to email all meeting attendees of the update. All attendees will be required to respond to the update to let you know their attendance status. To decline a new time proposal open the proposed new time email and simply reply. Use delete to remove the proposed new time request.

  50. Creating Additional Calendars • You can create more than one calendar in Outlook 2010. By default you begin with one calendar. • The college strongly encourages all employees to indicate their availability throughout their work day in their default calendar. • This will insure that meetings can be scheduled based on actual availability.

More Related