The information covered in this article is provided by:
Microsoft
Press
(http://mspress.microsoft.com/)
.
This article is part 2 of a series of thirteen
articles that explain how to use Outlook 2000 to communicate through e-mail. To
view the other articles in this series, please see the "Additional Resources"
section later in this article.
This information is an excerpt from
the
Quick Course in Microsoft Outlook 2000 book, Chapter 3: "Communicating with E-Mail".
Composing Messages
With Outlook, you both send and receive e-mail through the Inbox.
You'll practice the sending side of the equation first. For demonstration
purposes, you will e-mail a reminder message to yourself, but bear in mind that
you would probably use Outlook's Notes or Tasks component for this type of
reminder, rather than e-mail. In our examples, we use internal e-mail, but if
you are using Internet e-mail, you should have no difficulty following along.
Suppose you are planning a meeting with a client and you want to
remind yourself to check on the conference room reservation first thing
tomorrow morning. Follow these steps:
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New Mail Message button- Click the New Mail Message button on the toolbar to display a Message window.
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Message formats
You can send messages in one of three formats. The
simplest is Plain Text, which you use when you don't know which e-mail program
your message recipients have. Outlook Rich Text format can handle some text
formatting, and can be used to send messages to other Outlook users. HTML
format can handle more complex formatting but can't be interpreted by some
e-mail programs. To specify a default format, choose Options from the Tools menu, click the Mail Format tab, and make a selection from the Send In This Message
Format drop-down list. To change the format of a specific message,
choose the relevant command from the Format menu. - In the To edit box, type your own e-mail address. (To send a message to
someone else instead, enter his or her address. To send the same message to
more than one person, enter their addresses one after the other, separated by
semicolons.) Then press TAB to move to the next box.
- To send a courtesy copy of the message, you can enter the
name of the recipient in the CC edit box. For this message, leave the CC edit box blank by pressing TAB.
- Next type Confirm conference room
reservation in the Subject edit box and press TAB.
- Enter the message itself in the blank area at the bottom of
the window. Type the following: Check on conference room B
reservation. It should be reserved at 1:00 PM for two hours. Make sure overhead
projector is set up. The window now looks like this:
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Message options
When composing a new message, you can set options by
clicking the Options button on the Message window's toolbar. In the Message Settings section, specify the importance and sensitivity levels of the
message. Specifying the importance level as high displays an exclamation mark
in the message's header. (You can also set the importance level by clicking the
Importance: High or Importance: Low buttons on the toolbar.) You can set the sensitivity level to Normal, Personal, Private, or Confidential. In the Security section, select Encrypt Contents And Attachments
to make a message's contents readable only by its recipients and select Add Digital Signature to verify that you are the sender of the message. (You need a
digital ID to implement security; see the Help feature.) In the Voting
And Tracking Options section, set voting options (see the tip on the
next page) and specify notification options. In the Delivery Options section, specify locations for replies and for the sent message,
and set a delivery date/time and an expiration date for the message. (The
message is deleted if not opened by this date.) Also on this tab, you can
assign a message to a category by clicking the Categories button and making a selection.
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The Send button - Send the message by clicking the Send button. Outlook closes the Message window and does one of two
things:
- If you are connected to your e-mail server, Outlook
transfers the message to the Outbox and then sends it to the server. The server
then sends the message to the recipient. In this case, it will send the message
back to you because your own e-mail address is in the To edit box.
- If you are not connected to your e-mail server, Outlook
stores the message in the Outbox, where it waits until your next connection is
made.
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The Outbox icon
- If you are in the latter group, confirm that the message is
waiting to be sent by clicking the My Shortcuts button on the Outlook bar and then clicking the Outbox icon to display its contents in the workspace. Then redisplay the
Inbox's contents by displaying the Outlook Shortcuts group and clicking the Inbox icon on the Outlook bar.
Adding a signature
To have information, such as your name, job title,
company name, or slogan, automatically added to the end of all of your
messages, you can create a signature. (Avoid cutesy pictures or sayings as they
become tiresome rather quickly.) Choose Options from the Tools menu. On the Mail Format tab, click the Signature Picker button, and click New. Enter a name for the signature and click Next. Type your information in the text box, format it, and click Finish. Click OK in the Signature Picker dialog box, verify the default signature, and click OK. You can set up different signatures for different types of
messages. To change the default signature for a specific message, click the Signature button and make your selection.
Using virtual business cards (vcards)
You can pass on the information in a contact's address
card via e-mail with a virtual business card, or vcard. First display the
contents of Contacts, and then select the contact whose information you want to
pass on. Choose Forward As Vcard from the Actions menu, and Outlook displays a Message window with an icon for the
contact. Enter the recipient and subject information as usual, type your
message, and then send it on its way. Anyone who opens the message can
double-click the icon to display the address card for the contact, add any
additional information, and click Save And Close to save the information in their own contact list.
Voting
You can send e-mail messages with voting buttons to get
input from your colleagues about anything from officer elections to the venue
for the company picnic. Display a new Message window and then click the Options button on the toolbar. Click the Use Voting Buttons check box in the Voting And Tracking Options
section, and click the arrow to the right of its edit box to select voting
button names. To use your own names, type them in the edit box, separating them
with semicolons. Click Close and then send the message. When the message is opened, Outlook
shows the voting buttons at the top of the window. Recipients click the desired
button and send the response with or without editing it.
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
For additional information, click the article numbers below to
view the articles in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
307377
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/307377/EN-US/
)
OL2000: Communicating with E-Mail: Part 1: Using the Inbox
310485
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310485/EN-US/
)
OL2000: Communicating with E-Mail: Part 3: Addressing Messages Quickly
310486
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310486/EN-US/
)
OL2000: Communicating with E-Mail: Part 4: Attaching Files to Messages
310491
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310491/EN-US/
)
OL2000: Communicating with E-Mail: Part 5: Sending and Retrieving Messages
310487
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310487/EN-US/
)
OL2000: Communicating with E-Mail: Part 6: Replying to Messages
310488
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310488/EN-US/
)
OL2000: Communicating with E-Mail: Part 7: Forwarding Messages
310489
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310489/EN-US/
)
OL2000: Communicating with E-Mail: Part 8: Deleting Messages
307438
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/307438/EN-US/
)
OL2000: Communicating with E-Mail: Part 9: Organizing Messages
310580
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310580/EN-US/
)
OL2000: Communicating with E-Mail: Part 11: Using Folders
310581
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310581/EN-US/
)
OL2000: Communicating with E-Mail: Part 12: Moving Messages
310582
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310582/EN-US/
)
OL2000: Communicating with E-Mail: Part 13: Organizing Messages with the Rules Wizard
The information in this article is an excerpt from the
Quick Course in Microsoft Outlook 2000 book, published by Microsoft Press.
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For more information about this publication and other
Microsoft Press titles, see
.
Article ID: 310484 - Last Review: October 9, 2012 - Revision: 1.0
Applies to
- Microsoft Outlook 2000 Standard Edition