Microsoft Outlook is not an unfamiliar name to the world's PC users. Many of the ninety-five percent of the world's PCs that run one form or another of Windows will have a spot in their program menu marked Outlook. So, it's probably fair to assume that we all know what it's there for - it sends and receives emails, a simple little application that allows you a straightforward means of communication with the wider world. Correct?
Well, yes and no. The program in question, the near-universal mail application is does have the name Outlook - but the name has another half. Outlook Express (renamed Mail for the latest versions of Windows, adopting the original name found in early versions of MS Office) is a simple email program, but one with very little of the functionality, versatility and power of its bigger 'brother'.
Microsoft Outlook, in fact, has less in common with Outlook Express than might be imagined; indeed, only the appearance and the feel of the software connect the two together (hence the decision to bring the names together). Outlook is, in fact, far more than just an email client - it is a complete and very versatile personal information management (PIM) tool.
Of course, that's not to say that email isn't a significant part of the Outlook repertoire. Quite the opposite; email, and a range of tools associated with it, is at the heart of the application. The everyday sending and receiving is augmented by spelling and grammar checkers introduced from Word, and by the facility to see a preview of an attachment before you download it. Outlook will also do as much as is technically possible to protect your computer from malicious emails, with stringent filters and warnings about potentially harmful content in those mails that are not filtered.
With Outlook, you can also take control of those important emails, with an Instant Search facility that can pull up whatever information you need from emails (or from your diary or contact list) using however much or little detail you have to hand. Once found, you can make sure that that data (and future vital information) is always easy to locate, by highlighting anything you choose, making them stand out the way that you want them to.
Yet Outlook has more strings to its bow than just this (highly sophisticated and versatile) email management system. Its position as the market-leading PIM relies on far more than that alone. Outlook's calendar system allows for a diary that is as detailed or as simple as you need it to be. If you need a calendar that includes tasks for many people within your organisation, it can be shared instantly - calendar 'snapshots' can be created and emailed, converting a page of your calendar into html for easy viewing. Alternatively, using Microsoft Office Online, you can give access to your calendar to anyone who needs to know (whilst ensuring that no-one has access to it without your permission).
You can also create to-do lists, connected to or separate from your calendar, which can automatically remind you of what you need to do, when you need to do it. These can be linked to other Office applications - so if you need to work through some accounts in Excel, Outlook will not only inform you of this task, but connect to the necessary software for you.
What's more, Outlook Mobile Service broadens your options for communication markedly. Text messages can be sent to and received from phones as easily as email, whilst tasks, contact details and calendars can be freely sent back and forth between Outlook and mobile phones. Outlook can even send elements of your calendar and to-do list directly to your own phone, to ensure that you never miss a key appointment or important decision just because you're away from your PC.
Microsoft Outlook can transform the way you work, helping you both to stay in touch with clients and colleagues, and to keep your vital information where you need it, when you need it. With a short training course, you or your staff can learn to exploit all that Outlook offers, and help make sure everyone is moving forward together.
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It is very useful and effective to attend Excel course in person as this will give you more interaction and any help from the trainer. There is always something students don't understand and you need that helping hand. Very happy, thank you:).
Actually it was all pretty good, I would have liked to get more in depth on some things and less on others, but that is a general problem with dealing with many people of different experience!
I was pleased that I often learnt a short cut or extra dimension to functions and features of Excel that I regularly used.