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August 09, 2011 03:47 PM

Q: What proofing and thesaurus options are available in Microsoft Outlook 2010?

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A: I met an Outlook user who composes her email messages in Microsoft Word, then copies the text to the message body of a new email message. The messages she was creating were fairly significant—about a full page of text in Word. I asked her the motivation for this method, and her answer was twofold.

First, she thought Word handled her frequent saving of her work better. More importantly, she wanted to use the grammar and thesaurus tools available to her in Word. I showed her the Drafts folder in Outlook, of which she was fully aware. And then I showed her that the same proofing tools found in Word 2010 are available when composing an email message in Outlook 2010.

In Outlook, the proofing tools are available only when you're within a composition window, such as a new email message. As with Word, the tools are found under the Review tab in a section of the Ribbon labeled Proofing. (In Outlook 2007, the Proofing section of the Office Ribbon is found on the far right with the Message tab selected.) This is the same place we found Readability Statistics from a previous tip (see "Adding Readability Statistics to Outlook Spelling and Grammar").

If you're looking for a better word to incorporate into your text, highlight the word in question and click Thesaurus in the Proofing tools section. This action opens the Research pane to the right of the new message window. Figure 1 shows a sample of the thesaurus in Outlook 2010. You can right click anywhere in the message body and select Synonyms, Thesaurus to open the Research pane as well.
Outlook_Research_pane_Fig1sm_0
Figure 1: An email message in Outlook 2010 showing the Research pane (Click image for larger view)


The default reference for an Outlook 2010 US English install is Thesaurus: English (U.S.), but other reference tools are available in the drop-down menu, including Encarta Dictionary. These options are the same that are available in Word 2010. The thesaurus provides recommendations of words similar to a term highlighted in your message. Clicking the word in the Research pane gives a simple drop-down menu that lets you insert the preferred term with a single click.

The user I worked with for this simple option was satisfied that the proofing tools were the same, though she just had never tried them before. She now uses the Drafts folder in Outlook as well to save long messages while she's creating them. It seems users often lean on things they're comfortable with versus testing a feature that's unfamiliar

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Comments
  • Rich
    9 months ago
    Aug 19, 2011

    Simple to use should be a goal, but you can't please everyone as the features you use frequently may not be the ones I use. So how does Microsoft (or any vendor) choose what to put right up front? Educated guesses. In Outlook, and many other programs, you can customize the toolbars to easily access your favorite features.

    While I like a simple to use product, not at the expense of features. I see this a lot with "cloud" and phone apps, yes, they're scaled down and easy to use; but inevitably I find something missing that I use in the full version.

  • jlnewmark
    9 months ago
    Aug 18, 2011

    I'm afraid I have to agree, in part. Outlook 2010 is more complicated and in some cases, harder to use. Why do I need to open a message, switch tabs, and hit button to look at the properties when this feature used to be available from the preview window with a right click? Why is it almost impossible to figure out how to make a message sent to me "high importance" when I want to flag it for follow-up? Again, I have to open the darn thing and switch tabs, instead of simply using nested menus.

    Microsoft has NOT made things easier, especially for the power user. And for the regular user, who just wants it to WORK? They end up doing one of two things: using a known work-around, like your example user working in Word, or calling the Help Desk for stuff they used to be able to figure out on their own.

    It feels like "change for change's sake" -- like suddenly rearranging all the basic pieces of an automobile for no good reason. And yes, in some cases, I do agree with Dvarsam: it's pushing some users to seriously look at alternatives.

  • dvarsam
    9 months ago
    Aug 13, 2011

    It's because Outlook has stopped being easy to use!

    Everything is burried so deep down, that the user instead of spending 10 minutes typing down an E-mail, probably needs to spend a full day just wondering where are the mgmt tools hidden...!!!

    And Businesses are focused on completing ongoing/everyday activities & not wasting their days wondering around where the help tools/options are hidden.
    At the same time, "windowsitpro" & similar sites existance is relying on exactly this!!!

    As long as things are complicated, there is always jobs for everybody:

    1. You to write the article (and get paid),
    2. businesses to request outside technicians to install ms apps because they can't get them installed otherwise (and pay for it)
    3. and nobody thinking that we could ALL have spent our time more productively (i.e. with our families or even other activities)

    It seems that everyone is waisting time & money just to get things running!

    So, the question is: Why do we all have to pay such a high price for all this?

    No wonder why Google Android is beating all expectations down in the Mobile Market -> "it's the simplycity stupid"!!!

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