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View Live Stats View ReviewsOutlook Introduction Training Course
Face to face / Online public schedule & onsite training. Restaurant lunch included at STL venues.
Designed for Outlook 365
(95 reviews, see all 99,625 testimonials) |
From £495 List price £650
- 1 day Instructor-led
- Courses never cancelled
- Restaurant lunch
Syllabus
Who is this course for?
Our Microsoft Outlook Introduction course is suitable for complete beginners to Microsoft Outlook.
Prerequisites
A working knowledge of Windows is required, or our Microsoft Windows Introduction course. No experience of MS Outlook is required.
Benefits
At the end of this Outlook training you will have a good working knowledge of Outlook basics. You will feel more confident using Outlook and be able to manage and communicate using Microsoft Outlook.Users may set up meetings across the network, organise their calendar or delegate it to someone else, manage their to-do list using Tasks, and even leave notes on the desktop.
The powerful tools in Outlook in general helps simplify email communication, enhance group planning, scheduling of meetings, and also allow access to the information you need all from one place.
After completing this course you will be prepared to attend the Outlook Advanced training course.
Course Syllabus
What's new in Outlook
Getting Started
The program window
The Help system
The To-Do Bar
E-mail accounts
E-mail messages
Handling messages
Previewing, Opening and Saving attachments
Printing messages
Address Books
E-mail and Contact Management
E-mail management
Contact management
The master category list
Tasks
Working with tasks
Managing tasks
Appointments and Events
Working with appointments
Modifying appointments
Working with events
Time Zones
Calendar Snapshots
Meeting Requests and Responses
Working with meeting requests
Managing meeting requests
Handling meeting responses
Customizing Outlook
Personal folders
The organize panel
Signatures
Voting buttons
Interacting with the internet
Prices & Dates
What you get
"What do I get on the day?"
Arguably, the most experienced and highest motivated trainers.
Face-to-face training
Training is held in our modern, comfortable, air-conditioned suites.
Modern-spec IT, fully networked with internet access
Lunch, breaks and timing
A hot lunch is provided at local restaurants near our venues:
- Bloomsbury
- Limehouse
Courses start at 9:30am.
Please aim to be with us for 9:15am.
Browse the sample menus and view joining information (how to get to our venues).
Refreshments
Available throughout the day:
- Hot beverages
- Clean, filtered water
- Biscuits
Online training
Regular breaks throughout the day.
Learning tools
In-course handbook
Contains unit objectives, exercises and space to write notes
Reference material
Available online. 100+ pages with step-by-step instructions
24 months access to Microsoft trainers
Your questions answered on our support forum.
Training formats & Services
Training Formats & Services
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Testimonials
STFC
Steve Dawson
A very helpful course, and the trainer was very patient and helpful, essential for any computing course.
Outlook Introduction
Bite Communications
Rhena Bunwaree
The training was really good and went smoothly at a suitable pace for everyone to follow. Would strongly recommend to any new Microsoft Outlook starter.
Outlook Introduction
Private
Theodora Nicola,
PA
I think the course was very intense but really good. I learned a lot and feel more confident. I am glad of the support forum and the excercise/training manuals will come in very useful. Marius is very nice and patient and helpful.
Outlook Introduction
Training manual sample
Below are some extracts from our Outlook training manuals.
Compose and Send a Simple Message
You need to send some important
information to a client who is in another part of the country. The client needs
the information today. Sending it by regular mail is not an option. The client
is out of the office, so you can’t call either.
By using Outlook, you can quickly and efficiently send the
information in a simple message.
E-MAIL
Electronic mail, or E-Mail, is an
application that allows a user to create, send and receive electronic messages.
You
can send information and receive information from users within your network of
computers or outside your network of computers via the internet.
When you create a new message
using the ‘New E-mail’ button or Ctrl + N, Outlook displays a message form
that contains text boxes in which you can enter specific information.
In the new message, you'll need to get
oriented to the Ribbon. You'll see the Message tab on top, which contains
the commands and buttons that you're most likely to use every time you create
and send a message.
If you're having trouble finding
a command or a button, you may need to look on another tab. For example, to
insert a picture so that it appears in line with the text of your message, (not
as a separate attachment), you'll need to switch to the Insert tab.
Note This
isn't completely new, but it's something to be aware of:
Certain groups
and buttons will be available only when the flashing cursor is in the body of
the e-mail message. For example, formatting commands on the Basic Text group
won't be available when the flashing cursor is in the To... field or the
Subject: field; to use those commands, you need to click in the body of the
message.
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To... Email
address or username of the person to whom you want to send the message.
Cc... E-Mail
address or username of anyone who you want to send a copy of the message
(carbon copy) to.
Subject: A brief description of the
message
Message Body The text of the message
Default Mail Editor
Microsoft Word is the default mail
editor for Outlook. Therefore,
when you create mail messages you will have access to a number of Word
features, making it easier to create messages in Outlook.
Net etiquette or Network etiquette is a set of guidelines for ethical behaviour
on the internet, including sending and receiving e-mail. You can become
a responsible internet user by applying the following simple guidelines to your
own e-mail activity:
Think
twice before clicking the ‘Send’ button.
o
Once
you send an e-mail, you might not be able to take it back.
o
Realise
that an e-mail message can be easily circulated (forward, print, and
distributed)
Be
cautious with humour and sarcasm
o
Statements
that are funny person to person might lose their humour in writing and appear,
instead, confusing, or even vicious.
Use
CAPITAL LETTERS sensibly.
o
Statements
in Capitals can suggest you are shouting at the reader. It may also be used to
highlight important points.
You'll find the Address Book
command on the Message tab, OR click the ‘To’ button (below the ribbon.)
The Address book is a collection of
address books or address lists that you can use to find and select names, email
addresses and distribution lists to quickly address messages.
Global Address List
The Global Address List is a
list of all usernames and global distribution lists in a particular
organisation that is created and maintained by the Microsoft Exchange Server
Administrator. You can only access
the Global Address List if you are using a Microsoft Exchange Server email
account.
Show or hide
the Bcc field
If you prefer to type e-mail addresses
directly in the To and Cc boxes, you may also want to know how you can show the
Bcc (blind carbon copy) field so that you can type names there, too. (You
can use Bcc to send messages without exposing the names of the recipients to
each other — it's one way to respect the privacy of the people to whom you're
sending e-mail.)
You will
find the ‘Show Bcc’ command under the ‘Options’ tab.
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You can modify existing signatures
or create new ones, as well as set a default signature, by clicking the
arrow under the Signature command which is in the Include group on the Message
tab or on the Insert tab.
1.
If
you created signatures previously, you'll see them listed here.
2.
To
create new signatures, set a default signature, or modify existing signatures,
click Signatures...
Sometimes, you need to send a
message that contains important dates and times for upcoming events. You want
to make sure that the dates and times stand out in the message text. By
formatting specific text in a message, you will emphasise that text, drawing
the reader’s attention to it.
Select the text that you want to
emphasise. (To select all
the message text, press Ctrl +A)
Apply the format
Under the ‘Message’ tab in the
‘Basic Text’ group you can find most of the formatting tools required.
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