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organizing Microsoft Outlook

The Best Tips to Organizing Microsoft Outlook

By Blog, Business Organizing, Expert Articles, Free Articles, Home Office Organization, Home Organizing, Organizing Microsoft Outlook, Quick Organizing Tips No Comments

organizing Microsoft OutlookHow many emails do you have in your Inbox?  100, 1500, 5000, or 20,000+?  The larger the number the more time you waste and increased stress.  Although many dream of getting to ground zero and only processing today’s emails, the reality of this happening is not high on the priority list. Organizing Microsoft Outlook is easy with all the new features in Outlook 2010.

 

Go ahead and look at the number in your Inbox.  Do you feel like you have a 100 pound weight sitting on your shoulders or are you smiling because you are one of the rare few who only has this week’s emails waiting for you to deal with?  The number of emails sitting in your Inbox affects the speed of your Outlook searches and how much time you waste scrolling past the same email over and over.

 How to Start Organizing Microsoft Outlook

The key to getting a handle on your emails, improving your response time and staying on top of critical actions and time-sensitive tasks is to develop an approach to process your emails both from your computer and on your mobile devices.

1. Synchronize all your devices so you only process an email once.

For small business who don’t have access to a company server, set up a Google Business Account and use Google apps to connect your Outlook, phone and iPad to access your email, calendar, contacts and tasks from all your devices.  You can even access your Gmail account from anywhere and the sync will update your Outlook the next time you are at your computer.    If you only want to sync your email to your phone and iPad, you can use the free Gmail account, (note that you won’t be able to access your calendar, contacts and tasks).

2. Use the Conversation Feature – in Microsoft 2010 when Conversations is turned on, messages in your Inbox and other email folders can be organized by Conversation and Date.  This is handy when there are several emails in a conversation because you can delete all the previous emails and only keep the latest conversation.

To turn on or off Conversations – On the VIEW tab, in the CONVERSATIONS group, select or clear the SHOW AS CONVERSATION check box.  Next, click ALL FOLDERS.

3. Set up your Action and Reference Folders

Action Folders – are for emails that require action

Reference folders – are for emails with no action required.  You keep these emails to refer to them later, are permanent records or are for tax and legal requirements.

When you create your Action folders, type a period “.” in front of the action folder name.  Adding the period changes the sort order a moves your Action folders to the top of the list and your “Reference” folder under your Action folders.  You can also use numbers 01, 02, 03, 04 if you prefer to organize your Action folders in a certain order. Suggested Action folders:

..This Week (there are two periods here)

.Delegated – Deb

.Leads

.Parked

.Projects

.Receipts to Print

.Travel

.Waiting For/Pending

To create Reference folders, create a main folder called “Reference” and then second level folders using broad categories (example. Accounting > Budget 2012)

Separating your action and reference emails helps you gain control on what requires your attention.  No more wasting time scrolling past emails that don’t require your attention.

Arrange your emails by Conversation, From – In Outlook 2010, on the VIEW tab, in the ARRANGEMENT group, click one of the arrangement options.  One of the fastest ways to process your emails is to arrange by Conversations.

Organizing Microsoft Outlook emails is easy when you customize it the way you want to process your emails.  Now that you have your new action and reference folders set up, you can use the next four steps to process your Inbox and get it to ground zero, or close to zero depending on your preference.

Organizing Microsoft Outlook with F.A.S.T.

Use the F.A.S.T. Workflow Decision Making Process to quickly decide what the next action is.  With the F.A.S.T. process, you have four choices:

File – file emails in your Reference folders that have no action.  Drag and drop emails into the appropriate Reference folder.  A word of caution, at some point you will need to clean out these folders or move them to your Archive folder.

Act – these are emails that require action by you.  Drag emails that require action

Schedule – get your appointments into your calendar and save as an ALL DAY EVENT or at a SPECIFIC TIME.  If you are keeping the email to refer to at the appointment, simply drag the email to your calendar and all the info will be saved in the appointment.  Delete the email.

Toss – Read and delete whenever possible.  Be ruthless with the delete key.  You can set up your Deleted Folder to delete emails manually by you, monthly or whatever time frame you prefer.

If your inbox is overflowing with emails and organizing Microsoft Outlook seems like a daunting project, here’s a fast way to get your Inbox close to ground zero immediately.  Create an Action folder “.OLD EMAILS.”  Next, drag emails that are older than 7 days into the new .OLD EMAILS folder.  You’ll need to schedule time in your calendar to deal with this old emails.  This strategy gives you instant relief since you only have 7 days of emails to process.  You’ll be motivated to process the old email folder.

 What have you found was key to your organizing Microsoft Outlook? Join us in the Comments below!

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Organizing Microsoft Outlook: How to Never Miss an Important Deadline or Appointment Again

By Blog, Business Organizing, Free Articles, Home Office Organization, Organizing Microsoft Outlook, Uncategorized No Comments

Microsoft Outlook is a great organizing tool.  Are you using this powerful tool to the best of its potential? This article is part of a series of articles that will help you as begin organizing your Microsoft Outlook.

The Problem

You need to record to-dos on to your calendar, but you end up collecting scraps of paper everywhere as you jot things down to later transfer to your calendar.  You want to accomplish three big things:

  • Get rid of all those scraps of paper on your desk, in drawers, and lining your pockets
  • You want to have a clear list of what it is you need to accomplish today, and have an easier time planning your day.
  • You want to be able to see what the next action step you need to accomplish is.  Making it easier to cross things off the to-do list.

 Organizing Microsoft Outlook: Your Email Calendar

Your calendar can help you reduce stress and get through your day without missing any important to-dos.  When you get to organizing Microsoft Outlook you will find that your email calendar is a safe and reliable place to keep a number of important tasks. This means you won’t have to worry about forgetting daily tasks (or losing important slips of paper).

What Can I Track?

 Your email calendar is a great place to organize and record these everyday activities:

  • All of your important meetings and appointments
  • Follow-ups with clients or on important projects
  • Calls you need to make
  • You can set an all-day event reminder for time carved out for meetings, conferences, or other events
  • Block out time to work on specific projects
  • Life events: Birthdays, anniversaries, ect.

What Will it Look Like?

What does my email calendar look like?  Outlook gives you choices!  You can view the day, week, or month.  When you are organizing Microsoft Outlook you set your default view to what works best for you.

A Quick Tip: You can set your default view to Work Week. Then customize your view to show Monday through Friday.  This will give you a great view of what you have to accomplish during the week.

Organizing your Microsoft Outlook calendar can be even better accomplished through the use of the color coding system.  Don’t use so many colors that it becomes overwhelming and hard to read, but a sensible use of color can be very helpful.  You’ll be able to see what your day, week, and month hold at a glance and where your priorities are.

 Organizing Microsoft Outlook: Your Email Task List

Your email also contains a task list.  You may be confused about what the difference between your email task list and your email calendar.  Your calendar is for active tasks, items you are committed to doing, they have specific timelines and due dates.  Your task list is for an inactive list, things you intend to do, they don’t yet have a specific timeline or due date.

Using your task list for everyday tasks can create a HUGE list of tasks.  This frequently means that you only do the first couple things on your list and to-dos further down the list just keep going further and further down the list.

What are some good examples of items that work for your task list?  Ideas for future projects, family and friend gift ideas, music or bands you would like to find and listen to, books you want to read, your mission and vision for your business.  Think of your task list as a place for long term brain storming.

A Word of Warning

Another great reason to keep your daily tasks in your email calendar instead of task list, your phone may not sync with the task list.  Some phones, like the iPhone, do not currently sync with task list.  This means when you are away from your computer you would be disconnected from your daily to-dos, a sure way to miss something!

Organizing your Microsoft Outlook so your calendar and task list are handling the jobs best suited to them will help reduce stress and get your day running smoother.  Don’t delay start today!

I want to hear from you!  What is your favorite Microsoft Outlook feature?

Organizing Microsoft Outlook by Emptying Your Inbox

By Home Office Organization, Organizing Microsoft Outlook No Comments

Microsoft Outlook is a great tool to use for organizing your email and time. Outlook has many functions that will give you great advantages in staying organized.  This article is part of a series of articles that will help you as begin organizing your Microsoft Outlook.

Maybe you’ve been using Outlook for awhile now but you haven’t been taking advantages of any of the helpful functions.  Have you realized it is time to start organizing your Microsoft Outlook?  Is your inbox overflowing?  Then it’s time to get started.  And the best place to start is an empty inbox.

Start by doing a quick clean up of your inbox, here is how.  First create a folder for old emails.  Right click on the inbox, and select new folder.  Type Old Emails in the name field and click ok.  Now move any email in your inbox that is two weeks old or more.  This isn’t the end of the road for this email, you still have to sort it.  Schedule a small chunk of time everyday to sort through your folder of old emails until you’ve emptied it.  This means you’ve acted on, filed, or deleted all of your old emails.  Shift +delete will permanently delete any emails you’ve selected.  You can keep emails you have deleted for a week to two weeks before you permanently remove them.

Your email is not a system designed for filing.  You may have left an email in your inbox because you needed the attachment connected to it.  When you receive an email with an attachment you should save it outside of your email right away.  You can save this email attachment using one of two methods.  You could either open the email, click on “save attachment” in the file menu, or you could right click on the attachment and then select “save as”.  When you save your attachment give it a name that will remind you what the content of it is.  It is a waste of your time to have to open up multiple attachments searching for what you need because of unclear file names.  When you are organizing Microsoft Outlook it is important to save the files you need outside of your email service so that you can effectively empty your inbox.

If it feels like an entire email should be saved and filed you can do that in a couple ways.  The first is you can save it as a word document.  In order to do this you are literally going to copy and paste from an email into a document.  Or if you prefer you can go through a different process to save the email in my documents.  First select the email you want.  Then select “file”, followed by “save as”.  Search for “my documents”, or a different location in your computer if you want.  Enter in the file name you have chosen that will clearly identify your email message.  In the “save as” type field click on the down arrow and choose Outlook Message Format (*.msg), and then save.  You’ll notice the icon next to your file in my documents will show you have saved an email.

Organizing Microsoft Outlook should begin with a clear empty inbox.  In the future remember your inbox is not a filing system!  Once you have cleaned out your inbox of your old emails by acting on them, saving them, or deleting them stop the problem from reoccurring. The Rules Wizard in Microsoft is a great place to start.  This will help you organize your incoming emails into appropriate folders so they are easier to sort and act on.  Then you will never be buried in email again! Take the first step and start clearing them out today.