Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySamuel Barrett Modified over 9 years ago
1
Microsoft Office 2003- Illustrated Introductory, Second Edition Started with Outlook 2003 Getting
2
2Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Understand e-mail Start Outlook 2003 View the Outlook 2003 window Add a contact to the Address Book Create and send a new message Objectives
3
3Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Reply to and forward messages Send a message with an attachment Create a distribution list Send a message to a distribution list Objectives
4
4Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Understanding E-Mail E-mail software lets you send and receive electronic messages, called e-mail, over a network and the Internet –A network is a group of computers connected to each other with cables and software –The Internet is a network that connects millions of computers users around the world
5
5Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Understanding E-Mail (cont.) Benefits using e-mail –Provides a convenient way to communicate (store and forward technology) –Allows you to send large amounts of information –Lets you communicate with several people at once –Ensures delivery of information –Lets you communicate from a remote place –Provides a record of communication –Allows you to store information
6
6Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Understanding E-Mail (cont.)
7
7Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Understanding E-Mail (cont.) Electronic mail etiquette –Be careful what and how you express yourself in an e-mail –The recipient does not see your body language or voice tone to help interpret what you are saying –Don’t send confidential or sensitive material in an e-mail –E-mail messages are legally interpreted as property of the company for which you work
8
8Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Starting Outlook 2003 Start Outlook to read and send messages –Outlook may prompt you to set up a profile A profile is a set of information to identify individual e-mail usersA profile is a set of information to identify individual e-mail users Profiles allow more than one user to have individual e-mail accounts on the same computerProfiles allow more than one user to have individual e-mail accounts on the same computer
9
9Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Starting Outlook 2003 (cont.) To Start Outlook –Click the Start button on the Taskbar, point to All Programs, point to Microsoft Office, then click Microsoft Office Outlook OrOr –Click the Outlook icon on the Quick Launch toolbar Outlook icon
10
10Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Starting Outlook 2003 (cont.) Reading pane Mail icon Inbox
11
11Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Viewing the Outlook 2003 Window Outlook mail folders –The Inbox folder contains e-mail messages sent to you –The Outbox folder stores unsent e-mail message that you wrote –The Sent Items folders stores copies of sent messages –The Search Folders are a tool for organizing e-mail messages
12
12Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Viewing the Outlook 2003 Window (cont’d) Outlook mail folders –The Deleted Items folders contains messages you have deleted Available until you Empty the Deleted Items folderAvailable until you Empty the Deleted Items folder –The Favorites Folders are those folders you use most often
13
13Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Viewing the Outlook 2003 Window (cont’d) Main parts of the Outlook window –The Reading pane provides a vertical window to preview e-mail messages –The Navigation pane displays the folders you use to organize your e-mail –The Message header icons identify attributes of the messages
14
14Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Viewing the Outlook 2003 Window (cont.) Unread messages Messages arranged by date Folders Status bar Message header icons
15
15Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Adding a Contact to the Address Book Add names and e-mail addresses of people to whom you frequently send messages to in the Address Book –Address Book entries are known as contacts –Information you can enter in the Address Book include: Name, e-mail address, mailing address, phone numbers, and other personal informationName, e-mail address, mailing address, phone numbers, and other personal information Enter information in the Contact windowEnter information in the Contact window
16
16Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Adding a Contact to the Address Book Full Name text box E-mail text box
17
17Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Creating and Sending New Messages Each e-mail message must have one or more recipients –Use the Message window to create email messages –A message should have a meaningful subject –Enter the text of your message in the Message Body –Microsoft Word is the default text editor
18
18Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Creating and Sending New Messages (cont.) Message body Recipient Receives a copy Subject Send button Receives a blind copy
19
19Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Replying to and Forwarding Messages To read a message, select it and then preview it in the Reading Pane –After reading the message, you can delete it, move it to another folder, flag it, or leave it in the Inbox –You can respond to the message clicking the Reply button –You can forward the message to another person
20
20Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Replying to and Forwarding Messages (cont.) Reply options –Reply sends message to original sender original sender’s e-mail address appears in the Message window in the To: box original sender’s e-mail address appears in the Message window in the To: box –Reply to All sends message to original sender and all other recipients and persons who received CC copies
21
21Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Replying to and Forwarding Messages (cont.) Inbox folder Click the message to view it in the Reading Pane Message flagged for follow up
22
22Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Replying to and Forwarding Messages (cont.) Type reply message here RE indicates message reply Original message
23
23Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Replying to and Forwarding Messages (cont.) Emoticons –An example of an emoticon in an e-mail messages is :-) –Emoticons are faces created by keyboard characters to show emotion –Emoticons are often used humorously in e-mail messages
24
24Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Replying to and Forwarding Messages (cont.) Flagging messages –Organizes e-mail –Available in red, yellow, orange, green, or purple –For Follow-up Folder contains an up-to- date list of all Quick Flagged messages in every folder in your mailbox
25
25Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Sending a Message with an Attachment Attach any type of computer file to an e-mail message, including picture, video clips, and audio clips –The recipient needs appropriate software in order to open the attachment
26
26Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Sending a Message with an Attachment (cont.) Insert File button Attached image Attachment Options button
27
27Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Sending a Message with an Attachment (cont.) Options when sending messages –Set security level for message –Encrypt messages –Assign a level of message importance –Use voting and tracking –Request a message delivery receipt –Send replies to another email address –Specify delivery dates
28
28Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Creating a Distribution List A Distribution List is a collection of contacts to whom you regularly send messages Click the Address Book button Click the New Entry button Click New Distribution List Click OK to open the Untitled Distribution List window
29
29Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Creating a Distribution List (cont.) Distribution list name Select Members button Members appear here
30
30Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Creating a Distribution List (cont.) Current contacts Click to add contacts as members
31
31Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Creating a Distribution List (cont.) Distribution list
32
32Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Sending a Message to a Distribution List Distribution lists make it possible to send a message to the same group, without having to select each contact –Add new members to the list –Delete members from the list –If you change information about a contact who is a part of a distribution list, the distribution list is updated automatically
33
33Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Sending a Message to a Distribution List (cont.) Distribution list
34
34Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Sending a Message to a Distribution List (cont.) Message is addressed to the distribution list
35
35Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Sending a Message to a Distribution List (cont.) What is Microsoft Outlook Express? –Microsoft Outlook Express is an e-mail program that comes with Windows –It focuses primarily on e-mail, so it does not have the many features of Outlook
36
36Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Summary Slide Understanding E-Mail Starting Outlook 2003 Viewing the Outlook 2003 Window Adding a Contact to the Address Book Creating and Sending New Messages
37
37Getting Started with Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 Summary Slide (cont.) Replying to and Forwarding Messages Sending a Message with an Attachment Creating a Distribution List Sending a Message to a Distribution List
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.