1 / 27

Introduction to Microsoft Outlook Date: November 15, 2013 Time : 10:00 A M to 11:00 A M

Introduction to Microsoft Outlook Date: November 15, 2013 Time : 10:00 A M to 11:00 A M Location: Serra 156A Computer Lab Instructor: Amber Stokes. Learning Objectives. Navigate the “ Ribbon ” and Outlook e-mail Interface Create and use e-mail signatures

eric-gould
Download Presentation

Introduction to Microsoft Outlook Date: November 15, 2013 Time : 10:00 A M to 11:00 A M

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. Introduction to Microsoft Outlook Date: November 15, 2013 Time: 10:00 AM to 11:00 AM Location: Serra 156A Computer Lab Instructor: Amber Stokes

  2. Learning Objectives Navigate the “Ribbon” and Outlook e-mail Interface Create and use e-mail signatures Attach files to your e-mail Create contacts and distribution lists in your Address Book Create simple appointments and meetings on your Calendar Color code Categories for your different appointments Search your e-mail folders more effectively Use filters and rules to manage your e-mail better Introduction to Outlook 2010

  3. The Ribbon Introduction to Outlook 2010

  4. Tabs, Groups, Commands Tabs: The Ribbon is made up of different tabs, each related to specific kinds of work you do in Excel.Groups: Each tab has several groups that show related items together. Commands: A command is a button or a menu. Introduction to Outlook 2010

  5. Outlook 2007 vs. 2010 Outlook 2010 File Tab • Outlook 2007 Office Button Introduction to Outlook 2010

  6. Outlook Help Button pops up help window. Introduction to Outlook 2010

  7. Parts of your Outlook screen Ribbon Preview pane • Navigation bar Taskbar Introduction to Outlook 2010

  8. Using Signatures Introduction to Outlook 2010

  9. Creating a signature Introduction to Outlook 2010

  10. Writing an e-mail with Attachments Introduction to Outlook 2010

  11. Writing an e-mail with Attachments • Your attachments show up in the Attached box, where you can click and Delete to remove them, if necessary. • You will see the file size next to the attached file’s name. • You can attach multiple files but make sure you’re not sending too many large files in a single e-mail. Introduction to Outlook 2010

  12. Adding Contacts to your Address Book Introduction to Outlook 2010

  13. Adding Contacts to your Address Book Introduction to Outlook 2010

  14. Creating a Distribution List Introduction to Outlook 2010

  15. Creating a Distribution List Shows up in your Contacts list as a Group, not a person Introduction to Outlook 2010

  16. Using your Outlook Calendar • Appointments • Meetings • View Categories • Reminders • Shared Calendars Introduction to Outlook 2010

  17. Adding an appointment to your calendar Introduction to Outlook 2010

  18. Adding a meetingto your calendar Introduction to Outlook 2010

  19. Adding a meetingfrom your e-mail directly Introduction to Outlook 2010

  20. Using color coded Categories • Tables • Pictures/graphics • Special characters • Header/footer • Footnotes You can assign a category from multiple locations. Introduction to Outlook 2010

  21. Setting up color coded Categories • New category • Rename existing • Shortcut key • Meaningful names • You can have overlapping categories Introduction to Outlook 2010

  22. Using Reminders • You can set the reminder for any interval from 5 min to 2 weeks • You can customize the sound Outlook makes for each reminder Introduction to Outlook 2010

  23. Searching your Outlook account • You can search one folder or All Mail Items • Use quotes to look for any “particular phrase” • You can search by who sent you e-mail (From), subject, or if e-mail has attachments • Return count is always at the bottom of the screen • Also known as filtering Introduction to Outlook 2010

  24. Using File Folders in Outlook • Click on the Folder tab to see different Folder commands • When you create New Folder, make sure you’ve selected your Mailbox first instead of the Inbox • Search Folder – dynamically filled with the results of a particular search query (e.g. all e-mails requiring followup) Introduction to Outlook 2010

  25. Setting up Rules in Outlook • Rules allow you to tell Outlook to do the same set of commands for a given situation, e.g. • Move all e-mails from X to folder Y • Create an alert when X e-mails you • Divert group e-mails to folder Y Introduction to Outlook 2010

  26. What kind of rules can I implement? Alert you to e-mails from your boss, dean, co-workers or even family members Divert any non-critical e-mails (or e-mails with a particular keyword in the subject) to a folder that you can read later Send an alert when high importance e-mails are received Automatically archive, delete, forward or reply to certain types of messages Categorize all sorts of incoming e-mail for you Introduction to Outlook 2010

  27. Organizing Tasks and your To-Do list Build tasks from e-mails, calendar items, or from scratch Assign due dates, or follow-up dates Assign high, normal or low priority importance Set reminders before a task is due Introduction to Outlook 2010

More Related