Outlook or Outlook Express - Which one is best?

Posted by: Terry on Friday, August 1st, 2008

One of my obligations as a Virtual Assistant is to share best-of-practices information with my clients, and frequently that includes a bit of education concerning email clients - the programs that manage your email. Most of us have both Outlook and Outlook Express on our PCs, so which one should you use? What are the differences?

In an article by Dave Paradi, he points out that Outlook was designed as a Personal Information Tool (PIM), and Jay Lee defines it this way.

Outlook Express is a free program that comes with Internet Explorer and is a part of Microsoft Windows; it is not a part of the Microsoft Office suite of software. It supports email and has a very limited capacity for contact management. It does not replace Outlook, nor is it a tool for business. It may be fine for the home computer user.

Outlook is much more than an email (client) program; it’s a contact manager, calendar and scheduling manager, and a task manager just for *starters*. Outlook synchronizes easily with other databases such as ACT and is also linked to handheld PCs, which run on the Windows platform. If you want an all-in-one program for task, time and email management, and you want to stay with a Microsoft-based program, Outlook is the answer. Can you tell that I’m an avid Outlook user?

Here are a couple of tips for organizing and moving email from your Inbox:

Organizing Email Messages in Outlook

Email messages initially arrive to your Inbox, but what do you do with them as they accumulate? If you want to save your incoming email messages, organize them much like you’d organize your office – put them in alphabetical folders by subject in a file cabinet. In this case, the file cabinet is your Inbox, and the file folders will be created preferably by subject.

To create a folder within your Inbox:

Move Messages to the appropriate folder:

There are several ways to move messages from the Inbox to a different folder.

Future Tips will address the Outlook Task List, Creating and Scheduling Tasks by dragging messages to the Calendar and Task List, Managing the Outlook Calendar, and utilizing Contacts to record data and contact information.

One Response to “Outlook or Outlook Express - Which one is best?”

Olaf Says:
August 25th, 2008 at 2:07 am

Very interesting. Wanna read more about it. Do you want to write more about it?

 

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