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multiple profiles or one with multiple email accounts
I have not seen anything anywhere (I've googled) that really explains the the
pros and cons of having multiple profiles vs one with multiple email accounts. From what I've read, I don't know if either will work well for me. I have three email accounts, all of which I need to monitor simultaneously. I do not want to have to remember to change my "from" or "reply-to" when I respond to mails sent to any of those accounts. Nor do I want to have to change these when I write an email, wanting it to have it come from a specific address. It does not seem I can have multiple instances of Outlook open with alternate profiles. So, what is the best way to achieve what I want to do? What are the pros and cons of the various ways of setting it up? |
multiple profiles or one with multiple email accounts
If you open Outlook in a specific profile it will only act on the mail
account sent/received for that specific Profile How you handle multiple accounts within a single Profile depends to some extent on the version of Outlook But even in Outlook 2007 it would require some user action, little is going to be automated, as how would Outlook read your mind as to what email account you want to send a new mail from? By default outlook replies are sent via the same account the mail was received from. "wltiii" wrote in message ... I have not seen anything anywhere (I've googled) that really explains the the pros and cons of having multiple profiles vs one with multiple email accounts. From what I've read, I don't know if either will work well for me. I have three email accounts, all of which I need to monitor simultaneously. I do not want to have to remember to change my "from" or "reply-to" when I respond to mails sent to any of those accounts. Nor do I want to have to change these when I write an email, wanting it to have it come from a specific address. It does not seem I can have multiple instances of Outlook open with alternate profiles. So, what is the best way to achieve what I want to do? What are the pros and cons of the various ways of setting it up? |
multiple profiles or one with multiple email accounts
What version of Outlook?
I know what I would do: 1 profile and visibly unique signatures assigned to each acct. so I could easily tell which account I was using. I'd set a rule to delay sending by a couple of min so I had time to change the acct, if I hit send and went 'oops, did I change the acct' - but once you get in the habit of selecting the acct before addressing the message, it becomes second nature. The only way you can have multiple outlook running is with multiple windows profiles and fast user switching. Otherwise you need to keep opening and closing outlook to change profiles. -- Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook] Outlook Tips: http://www.outlook-tips.net/ Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com Outlook Tips by email: EMO - a weekly newsletter about Outlook and Exchange: You can access this newsgroup by visiting http://www.microsoft.com/office/comm...s/default.mspx or point your newsreader to msnews.microsoft.com. "wltiii" wrote in message ... I have not seen anything anywhere (I've googled) that really explains the the pros and cons of having multiple profiles vs one with multiple email accounts. From what I've read, I don't know if either will work well for me. I have three email accounts, all of which I need to monitor simultaneously. I do not want to have to remember to change my "from" or "reply-to" when I respond to mails sent to any of those accounts. Nor do I want to have to change these when I write an email, wanting it to have it come from a specific address. It does not seem I can have multiple instances of Outlook open with alternate profiles. So, what is the best way to achieve what I want to do? What are the pros and cons of the various ways of setting it up? |
multiple profiles or one with multiple email accounts
Thanks, Diane. And, thanks DL.
I am using Outlook 2007. I am surprised outlook does not allow switching without shutting down, or starting up separate instances. I can do this currently with Eudora. The reason I wanted to move to Outlook was the contact management and scheduling capabilities built-in. I work out of the house and get meeting requests. Having such requests entered into an Outlook calendar is great. But, having to shut down and re-open for each profile really is a non-starter. I may try Diane's advice, however, though it seems a bit cumbersome. Bill www.changent.com "Diane Poremsky [MVP]" wrote: What version of Outlook? I know what I would do: 1 profile and visibly unique signatures assigned to each acct. so I could easily tell which account I was using. I'd set a rule to delay sending by a couple of min so I had time to change the acct, if I hit send and went 'oops, did I change the acct' - but once you get in the habit of selecting the acct before addressing the message, it becomes second nature. The only way you can have multiple outlook running is with multiple windows profiles and fast user switching. Otherwise you need to keep opening and closing outlook to change profiles. -- Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook] Outlook Tips: http://www.outlook-tips.net/ Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com Outlook Tips by email: EMO - a weekly newsletter about Outlook and Exchange: You can access this newsgroup by visiting http://www.microsoft.com/office/comm...s/default.mspx or point your newsreader to msnews.microsoft.com. "wltiii" wrote in message ... I have not seen anything anywhere (I've googled) that really explains the the pros and cons of having multiple profiles vs one with multiple email accounts. From what I've read, I don't know if either will work well for me. I have three email accounts, all of which I need to monitor simultaneously. I do not want to have to remember to change my "from" or "reply-to" when I respond to mails sent to any of those accounts. Nor do I want to have to change these when I write an email, wanting it to have it come from a specific address. It does not seem I can have multiple instances of Outlook open with alternate profiles. So, what is the best way to achieve what I want to do? What are the pros and cons of the various ways of setting it up? |
multiple profiles or one with multiple email accounts
A lot of people say it about OE too - "but I can do it with Outlook
Express" - but its not true. Switching in OE closes OE and restarts it - the only diff is you need to use just one command to switch and you do it from the menu in OE. Outlook requires at least 2 steps. I haven't used eudora since about 1987 so I forget how it works, but it wouldn't surprise me if it closes and reopens like OE does, you just don't know it. :) -- Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook] Outlook Tips: http://www.outlook-tips.net/ Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com Outlook Tips by email: EMO - a weekly newsletter about Outlook and Exchange: You can access this newsgroup by visiting http://www.microsoft.com/office/comm...s/default.mspx or point your newsreader to msnews.microsoft.com. "wltiii" wrote in message ... Thanks, Diane. And, thanks DL. I am using Outlook 2007. I am surprised outlook does not allow switching without shutting down, or starting up separate instances. I can do this currently with Eudora. The reason I wanted to move to Outlook was the contact management and scheduling capabilities built-in. I work out of the house and get meeting requests. Having such requests entered into an Outlook calendar is great. But, having to shut down and re-open for each profile really is a non-starter. I may try Diane's advice, however, though it seems a bit cumbersome. Bill www.changent.com "Diane Poremsky [MVP]" wrote: What version of Outlook? I know what I would do: 1 profile and visibly unique signatures assigned to each acct. so I could easily tell which account I was using. I'd set a rule to delay sending by a couple of min so I had time to change the acct, if I hit send and went 'oops, did I change the acct' - but once you get in the habit of selecting the acct before addressing the message, it becomes second nature. The only way you can have multiple outlook running is with multiple windows profiles and fast user switching. Otherwise you need to keep opening and closing outlook to change profiles. -- Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook] Outlook Tips: http://www.outlook-tips.net/ Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com Outlook Tips by email: EMO - a weekly newsletter about Outlook and Exchange: You can access this newsgroup by visiting http://www.microsoft.com/office/comm...s/default.mspx or point your newsreader to msnews.microsoft.com. "wltiii" wrote in message ... I have not seen anything anywhere (I've googled) that really explains the the pros and cons of having multiple profiles vs one with multiple email accounts. From what I've read, I don't know if either will work well for me. I have three email accounts, all of which I need to monitor simultaneously. I do not want to have to remember to change my "from" or "reply-to" when I respond to mails sent to any of those accounts. Nor do I want to have to change these when I write an email, wanting it to have it come from a specific address. It does not seem I can have multiple instances of Outlook open with alternate profiles. So, what is the best way to achieve what I want to do? What are the pros and cons of the various ways of setting it up? |
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