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Create a Distribution List/Contact Group in Outlook

 

Outlook 2010 Contact Group Ribbon

 

A distribution list is one contact that contains email addresses for multiple people. In Outlook 2010, distribution lists have been re-named contact groups, but they’ve been called distribution lists for so long, I don’t expect that to change.

Whatever you call them, they are great for tons of different reasons.  Do you work on a team and want to email everyone without entering each individual email address in the To line?  Or do you have a group of fifty people you want to be able to email quickly and often?  If so, distribution lists, or contact groups, are for you.

Create a Contact Group in Outlook 2010

  1. In Outlook 2010, click Contacts folder and click the New Contact Group button on Home tab of the ribbon.
  2. A new Contact Group window will open.
  3. Type the name of your contact group in the Name box.
  4. Click Add Members, and from the drop down menu, select From Address Book or From Outlook Contacts.
  5. Double click on the name of every contact you want to add to your list and click OK.
  6. To add a someone not in your address book or contact list, click Add Members, and select New Email Contact from the drop down menu. Fill in the Display Name and Email address fields and click OK.
  7. When you’re finished adding email addresses to your Distribution List/Contact Group, click Save and Close.

Create a Distribution List in Outlook 2007

  1. In Outlook 2007, go to the File menu, select New, and select Distribution List.
  2. A new Distribution List window will open.
  3. Type the name of your distributon list in the Name box.
  4. Click Add Members.
  5. You will be shown your Contacts or your Global Address List. To switch between lists, use the Address Book drop down menu in the tip right corner.
  6. Double click on the name of every contact you want to add to your list and click OK.
  7. To add a someone not in your address book or contact list, click Add New on the ribbon. Fill in the Display Name and Email address fields and click OK.
  8. When you’re finished adding email addresses to your Distribution List/Contact Group, click Save and Close.

 Create a Distribution List/Contact Group From a List in Excel

  1. Follow steps 1 - 5 above.
  2. Click in the Members box at the bottom of the Address Book or Contacts window.
  3. Go to your Excel spreadsheet and select the email addresses you want to add to the group. Select only the email addresses.
  4. Copy (Ctrl+C or right-click and select Copy).
  5. Go back to the open Address Book or Contacts window in Outlook.
  6. Paste (Ctrl+V or right-click and select Paste).
  7. Click OK.
  8. When you’ve finished adding contacts, click Save and Close.

 

 

RSS Feeds in Outlook – The Hidden Mailbox Hog

We’ve blogged before (here, here, and here) about what a challenge it can be to keep your mailbox under its size limit. Today we’ll talk about the overlooked folder that can keep a mailbox at the brink of overload – the RSS Feeds folder.

The RSS Feeds folder was introduced in Outlook 2007 and is also available in 2010. In short, RSS Feeds collect updates to blogs that you subscribe to. They show up in Outlook looking like emails. (For a more in depth explanation, read the Wikipedia article about RSS feeds.) These “emails” can clog up your mailbox.

But if you’ve never set up an RSS feed to go to Outlook, you should be golden, right? Unfortunately, no. Many people find that they are automatically subscribed to Microsoft RSS feeds. If you don’t unsubscribe, you could end up with hundreds or thousands of unread messages.

Here’s how to unsubscribe from a feed and delete the contents of the folder at once:

  1. Go to either the Mail view or the Folder List view of the Navigation Pane (the column on the left).
  2. Expand the RSS Feeds folder.
  3. Select one of the sub folders you’d like to delete.
  4. Press the Delete key on your keyboard.
  5. When asked if you really want to delete that folder, click Yes.

I’ve read that some people who have Windows 7 and Outlook 2010 have deleted RSS feeds only to have them reappear. If you fall into this category, use the instructions below:

  1. Click the File tab.
  2. Click Options.
  3. Click Advanced.
  4. Under RSS Feeds, uncheck the box for Synchronize RSS Feeds to the Common Feed List (CFL) in Windows.
  5. Click OK.

 Tune in next week for more information about RSS feeds.

 

Outlook 2010′s Clean Up Feature

How many times do you get a lot of back and forth emails that are completely unnecessary to keep?  Outlook 2010 offers a new feature called Clean Up, which deletes redundant messages in a conversation, and keeps only the most recent.  This is helpful because the most recent email contains the thread of all of the quoted replies in it.  Therefore, there is no need to keep all of the other emails, when their contents are quoted in the last email.

On the Home tab, click on the Clean Up button to see the menu of options available.  See the screenshots below.

 

Screenshot of Outlook 2010's Clean Up menu

Outlook 2010's Clean Up button and menu options

 

Screenshot of Outlook 2010's Clean Up button

Outlook 2010's Clean Up button, condensed view

 

These are the menu options:

  • Clean Up Conversation only cleans up the conversation that is selected.
  • Clean Up Folder cleans up all of the conversations in the currently shown folder.
  • Clean Up Folder & Subfolders cleans up all of the conversations in the current folder and its subfolders.

Like Outlook 2010′s Ignore feature, all of the cleaned up messages are moved to your Deleted Items folder.  So if you are nervous that some emails may have been accidentally deleted, then click on your Deleted Items folder.  In here, you can see all the moved emails.  For any messages you want to keep, just move the message back to your Inbox.  You can do this by dragging the message to your Inbox, right-clicking on the message and choosing Move, or using the Move button on the Home tab of Outlook 2010.

Outlook 2010′s Ignore Feature

How often do you get copied on an email conversation that you do not care about?  And then everyone keeps hitting “Reply All”, flooding your Inbox with unnecessary email.  Outlook 2010 offers you a quick one-click solution.  First, make sure that one of the emails in that conversation is selected in your Inbox.  Then, on the Home tab, click the Ignore button.  See the screenshots below.  In the pop up window, click on the Ignore Conversation button.  This moves current and future email messages from the selected conversation to the Deleted Items folder.

 

Screenshot of Outlook 2010's Ignore button

Outlook 2010′s Ignore button


Screenshot of Outlook 2010's Ignore button, in condensed view

Outlook 2010′s Ignore button, condensed view

If you want to stop ignoring a conversation, a message from that conversation must still be in the Deleted Items folder.  Select the message by single-clicking on it, and then press the Ignore button.  In the pop up window, click on Stop Ignoring Conversation.  This conversation is moved back to your Inbox, and all future messages in the conversation will be delivered to the Inbox.

Let me offer a word of caution.  If the subject line is too general, ignoring the conversation may catch more email than you want.  For example, I ignored a conversation with the subject line “Outlook 2010″, and Outlook considers email messages from a year ago with the same subject line as part of the conversation.  Therefore, it moved those year-old messages to the Deleted Items folder.  The Ignore feature works best with more specific subject lines.  Also, you should check the Deleted Items folder regularly to ensure this feature does not unintentionally move email messages.

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