What's New In Microsoft Outlook Version 2010? Cool New Tips and Tricks
When I think of productivity tools
for the modern business
professional, one of the first that
comes to mind is Outlook,
Microsoft's insanely useful personal
management program. Outlook began
life as an email client, and it's
still a great one; but in the past
decade, it's grown into so much
more. These days, Outlook is also
one of the chief ways that savvy
business professionals manage their
time and maximize their
accessibility, from scheduling their
meetings to keeping track of their
personal contacts.
This past year we were blessed with
a new version, the inventively-named
Microsoft Outlook 2010. It's
chockfull of interesting and
practical features—some of them
completely new, and others
refinements of features introduced
in earlier versions. In this
article, I'll show you how to best
take advantage of a few.
The Ribbon Interface
In Outlook 2007, Microsoft
introduced the Ribbon Interface on
some Outlook windows, primarily
those associated with message views.
Now it's all over the place,
including the Inbox itself. As part
of the Microsoft Office Fluent User
Interface, it's designed to help you
quickly find the commands you need.
As with Word and other Office
programs (into which the Ribbon has
been integrated long since), related
tasks are grouped under tabs; with
minor exceptions, menus are history.
And here's something exciting: you
can also add customized tabs to your
ribbons to enhance your personal
work style and thus maximize your
productivity.
Quick Steps
This is a marvelous little feature
located in the Mail view on the Home
tab. With Quick Steps, you can set
up one-click commands for the
functions you use most often. This
is especially handy for automating
repetitive tasks. In addition to the
custom options, there are several
default Quick Steps with
self-evident names, including Move
to: , Forward: FYI (which uses FYI
instead of FW when forwarding
messages), To Manager, Team Email,
Done, and Reply and Delete. All you
have to do is configure them, and
you're good to go.
Sadly, a default Quick Step they
left out is Get Me a Cup of Coffee,
but I'm sure an enterprising manager
could set this up as a custom
command in about five minutes.
Conversation Changes
Not only can you now see more of
your messages at once, thanks to the
new Conversation View, it's easier
than ever to organize them.
Conversations are automatically
grouped by date and subject, and you
can expand or collapse those views
with one click. And here's the
kicker: you can quickly reduce the
noise in your inbox by using two new
features, Ignore Conversation and
Clean Up Conversations.
If you’re getting a lot of Forwards,
FYIs or other stuff that you don’t
care to, instead of wading through
and deleting the useless threads,
just click the Ignore command in the
Delete group on the Message tab. Up
will pop a dialog box; click Ignore
Conversation, and presto, the whole
conversation is sent to Deleted
Items purgatory. If you decide later
that ignoring the conversation was a
mistake, you can go back and click
Ignore again. If the conversation is
still in the Deleted Items folder,
you can select Stop Ignoring
Conversation, and it will reappear
in your Conversation View.
Clean Up Conversations is just as
useful. By default, Outlook saves
the original message a sender is
replying to at the bottom of their
message. After a while, this can
make for some long, space-wasting
messages. You can use Clean Up to
sweep any conversation or folder
clean of all redundant messages,
leaving only the most recent email
that contains the entire
conversation. Goodbye, clutter—hello
productivity! As with the Ignore
function, the cleaned-up messages go
into the Deleted Items folder by
default, where they can be recovered
as long as the folder hasn't been
emptied. You can configure the
feature to send them elsewhere, if
you like, and there are several
other options to let you specify
exactly what gets cleaned up when
you click the button.
Messaging Tweaks
In addition to the big changes
outlined above, there are a number
of small but significant changes to
the message interface. Now you can
configure Outlook to automatically
close a message after you reply, and
even better, there's extended
capacity to resend or recall
messages.
In previous Outlook versions, these
functions were possible, but only if
you and your recipient were both
using a Microsoft Exchange server.
Now the only restriction is that
your recipient is also using
Outlook, and their settings are
configured properly (this varies
from version to version). The
recall/resend may not succeed if
their settings aren't right, but as
one reviewer pointed out, it's worth
a try.
Calendaring Tips
The ability to manage calendars has
always been one of Outlook's most
useful features. The calendaring
function hasn't changed too much in
this version, but it's been tweaked
to be more streamlined, and the
ability to share schedules and
manage multiple calendars has
improved noticeably.
The new Calendar Groups feature is
amazingly helpful, for example,
because it lets you see the
calendars of the people you work
with frequently. Once you've
configured the feature, you can view
all their calendars with ease, and
you can even determine which meeting
rooms or other resources are
available for use. One new feature
that you team leaders will
appreciate is the ability to add
your team members' schedules to your
new and improved Schedule View,
which makes it simple to schedule
meetings by laying out resource,
Individual, and Group calendars on a
horizontal line so that you can more
easily identify the best time to
meet.
Another special feature that you can
use in combination with the above is
Meeting Suggestion, a feature added
back in Outlook 2007. Whenever you
enter a meeting request, the system
analyzes the schedules of the
attendees and suggests the best day
and time for the meeting. If you
receive a meeting request yourself,
you can immediately use the Quick
View to see how it affects your
calendar, and accept or decline with
one click.
Also: if you're very busy, you may
have a lot of old appointments and
meetings cluttering up your
calendar. If you're sick of looking
at them and don't want to deal with
them one by one, you can set the
system to AutoArchive the old
appointments by right-clicking on
your calendar in the My Calendars
list and selecting the AutoArchive
tab. From there, it's up to you to
configure the archiving settings to
best suit your needs.
Social Connector
Here's a nifty new trick that allows
you to pull information from social
networks like Facebook, MySpace,
Linked In, and Microsoft Live
straight into Outlook. When you add
someone to the Outlook Social
Connector (OSC), it keeps track of
their messages, status updates,
comments, and more. It'll even pull
their contact information into your
system, and update it whenever it
changes.
Note, however, that you'll need to
install a provider add-in for each
social network you want to track.
The network itself will have to
provide these. If they don't already
appear on this page, then you'll
need to check with the social
network you're interested in adding
to see if they support OSC.
Search Enhancements
Another feature that Microsoft has
improved upon in this version of
Outlook is the search function. Once
upon a time, it could be a pain to
track down certain items without
plugging in a third-party module. In
Outlook 2007, however, Instant
Search was introduced -- and I, for
one, have been happily using it
since.
In Outlook 2010, the Search feature
is even better! Now when you click
the Search tab on the Ribbon, you
get a variety of ways to search for
a message. You can search by sender
or recipient, by specific flags,
attachments, or keywords, by when a
message was sent, and more. You can
also configure a search to your
specifications, and save that search
for later use. To access and reuse
those searches, all you have to do
is click the Recent Searches icon.
One thing that hasn't changed is
that the search is initially limited
to wherever you are within Outlook:
Contacts, Calendar, Mail, etc.
However, you can widen your search
to other folders in that area
(including Deleted Items) by
clicking Try searching again at the
end of the search results.
Mail Tips
Sometimes the simplest things can
cause you to stumble. In an effort
to hurry up and maximize
productivity, minor errors can creep
into your work. Often these aren’t
any big deal, but they may make you
look less professional...and
sometimes a mistake can balloon to
unexpected proportions.
The Mail Tips feature can be
surprisingly helpful in this regard.
Basically, the feature tells you
when you're about to perpetrate a
common email error that might cause
a problem: for example, if you
accidentally click Reply All when
you were BCC'd a message, it'll pop
up a message warning you about what
you're doing, so you can take it
back in time. If you try to send an
email to a mailbox you don't have
permission to send mail to, you'll
get a message letting you know that
beforehand, too. And here's a Mail
Tip I think is especially handy: if
you try to send a message to someone
out of the office, you'll get their
out-of-office message before the
email is sent if you're both on the
same Exchange 2010 server.
Phone Related Features
The ability to send SMS messages
from Outlook to your non-smart cell
phone was introduced in an earlier
version of Outlook, and has been
refined in Outlook 2010, as you can
see in this
YouTube video. But there's a new
phone-related feature in Outlook
2010 that, while probably of limited
utility, I find it to be way cool.
In Outlook 2007 Microsoft introduced
Unified Messaging, which makes it
possible to access voice mail and
faxes as well as regular email.
Among other things, UM lets you add
received phone numbers to your
contact list, and reply to voice
mail with an email (assuming the
sender's email address is in the
system). With the new Voice Mail
Preview, the system can actually
listen to a voice mail and create a
speech-to-text transcript of the
message. While it's not strictly
necessary, this feature can be handy
if you'd rather read a text message
than listen to voice mail for one
reason or another.
Little Things
Finally, there are a couple of minor
but useful features in Outlook 2010
that I want to mention. They're not
much, but they definitely improve
usability, which improves
productivity.
Enhanced Spell Checking.
Spell checking is now available in
more places than ever, including
email subject lines, meeting
requests, and tasks. Also: if you've
used older versions of Outlook,
you've probably run into forced
spell checking, which does exactly
what the name implies. This isn't
new with Outlook 2010, but it's
worth mentioning. It can be
embarrassing to send an email with
misspelled words; and worse, it can
reduce the message's readability,
resulting in decreased productivity
all around. Make sure this feature
is configured, and you have less to
worry about.
Auto-Complete Improvements.
Microsoft's Auto-Complete feature is
handy, but it can be annoying. It's
been possible to turn off
Auto-Complete for several versions
of Outlook now, but it was an
all-or-nothing feature. With Outlook
2010, you can now remove specific
names from the list of suggestions.
Even better, if you're using an
Exchange Server account, your
Auto-Complete list is available from
any computer connected to the
server.
The Bottom Line
Love it or hate it, Microsoft is a
software juggernaut for good reason:
it insists on producing superbly
useful programs like Outlook, and
then refining and broadening their
capabilities in further releases.
Outlook 2010 is no exception. It's a
big, complex program, but the new
features in this version more than
make up for the learning curve
you'll have to face after you
install it.
I hope this article helps you take
advantage of them!
If you enjoyed this article, you can register for the January 31, 2011 webinar on exactly how to do this! http://www.theproductivitypro.com/2011webinars.
Make it a productive day! (TM)
(C) Copyright 2010 Laura Stack. All rights reserved.
© 2011 Laura Stack. Laura Stack is a personal productivity expert, author, and professional speaker whose mission is to build high-performance productivity cultures in organizations by creating Maximum Results in Minimum Time®. She is the president of The Productivity Pro®, Inc., a time management training firm specializing in productivity improvement in high-stress organizations and the 2011-2012 President of the National Speakers Association. Since 1992, Laura has presented keynotes and seminars on improving output, lowering stress, and saving time in today’s workplaces. She is the bestselling author of four books: SUPERCOMPETENT; The Exhaustion Cure; Find More Time; and Leave the Office Earlier. Laura has been a spokesperson for Microsoft, 3M, Xerox, and Office Depot. She is the creator of The Productivity Pro® planner by Day-Timer and has been featured on the CBS Early Show, CNN, and the New York Times. Her clients include Starbucks, Cisco Systems, Wal-Mart, and Bank of America. To have Laura speak at your next event, call 303-471-7401 or visit www.TheProductivityPro.com to sign up for her free monthly productivity newsletter.