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#1
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Hi, I recently upgraded my Outlook 2003 to Outlook 2007. I do not use
exchange, but I do use Office Calendar (by Lookout Software) to share calendars and contacts. From what I've seen on the internet, I expected when creating a new message, to be able to search for contacts, by clicking To:, and use the Advanced Find to be able to search for other fields within a contact, like company or title or city. However, my advanced find window, has only one field, that is "Find names containing". Compared to other examples from what I've seen on the internet, where you can search in the Display Name, First Name, last name, Title, Alias, Company, etc. Also, if I try to choose More Columns radio dial button to have it search for a key word in a different field it appears to do nothing. Do I have to have Exchange to be able to search in other fields of a contact? Thanks |
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#2
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You would never use the address book view of your Contacts for searching.
You search in the Contacts Folder. -- Russ Valentine "JuliaB" wrote in message ... Hi, I recently upgraded my Outlook 2003 to Outlook 2007. I do not use exchange, but I do use Office Calendar (by Lookout Software) to share calendars and contacts. From what I've seen on the internet, I expected when creating a new message, to be able to search for contacts, by clicking To:, and use the Advanced Find to be able to search for other fields within a contact, like company or title or city. However, my advanced find window, has only one field, that is "Find names containing". Compared to other examples from what I've seen on the internet, where you can search in the Display Name, First Name, last name, Title, Alias, Company, etc. Also, if I try to choose More Columns radio dial button to have it search for a key word in a different field it appears to do nothing. Do I have to have Exchange to be able to search in other fields of a contact? Thanks |
#3
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Actually in our office, that is almost a 100% of the time the way we do it.
They are going to send an email to a myriad of people. So they pick new email message, choose to, and then need to search for the people that they want. Because we have 81 parishes, and 100 priests, and 10 schools, and dozens of other groups of people, we need to be able to have a good way of organizing them so that they can choose the people that they want to send the email to. That is what we are trying to figure out. They can't be just alphabetized, because you might not know WHO the principal of a school is, but you know you need to find the principal in a named parish. If you have a better way of doing it, that I could educate my staff that is exactly the answers that I am looking for. I am trying to implement categories, but the ability to search for the different fields is huge here. "Russ Valentine" wrote: You would never use the address book view of your Contacts for searching. You search in the Contacts Folder. -- Russ Valentine "JuliaB" wrote in message ... Hi, I recently upgraded my Outlook 2003 to Outlook 2007. I do not use exchange, but I do use Office Calendar (by Lookout Software) to share calendars and contacts. From what I've seen on the internet, I expected when creating a new message, to be able to search for contacts, by clicking To:, and use the Advanced Find to be able to search for other fields within a contact, like company or title or city. However, my advanced find window, has only one field, that is "Find names containing". Compared to other examples from what I've seen on the internet, where you can search in the Display Name, First Name, last name, Title, Alias, Company, etc. Also, if I try to choose More Columns radio dial button to have it search for a key word in a different field it appears to do nothing. Do I have to have Exchange to be able to search in other fields of a contact? Thanks . |
#4
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The first thing you need to understand is that the address book interface is
a deprecated relic from Outlook 97 that is no longer useful nor is it the intended interface for searching for or filtering recipients. For the past 12 years all searching and filtering functions have been built into the Contacts Folders where they are quite robust (that's where you can use Categories, Instant Search and Advanced Find). Your users simply need to get with the times and use Outlook the way it was intended: Find and select their recipients first from the Contacts Folder, select them, then start the message (Hint: Actions New Message to Contact..) Abandon the Address Book view once and for all. Protestants have. Time for the Catholics to get up to speed. -- Russ Valentine "JuliaB" wrote in message ... Actually in our office, that is almost a 100% of the time the way we do it. They are going to send an email to a myriad of people. So they pick new email message, choose to, and then need to search for the people that they want. Because we have 81 parishes, and 100 priests, and 10 schools, and dozens of other groups of people, we need to be able to have a good way of organizing them so that they can choose the people that they want to send the email to. That is what we are trying to figure out. They can't be just alphabetized, because you might not know WHO the principal of a school is, but you know you need to find the principal in a named parish. If you have a better way of doing it, that I could educate my staff that is exactly the answers that I am looking for. I am trying to implement categories, but the ability to search for the different fields is huge here. "Russ Valentine" wrote: You would never use the address book view of your Contacts for searching. You search in the Contacts Folder. -- Russ Valentine "JuliaB" wrote in message ... Hi, I recently upgraded my Outlook 2003 to Outlook 2007. I do not use exchange, but I do use Office Calendar (by Lookout Software) to share calendars and contacts. From what I've seen on the internet, I expected when creating a new message, to be able to search for contacts, by clicking To:, and use the Advanced Find to be able to search for other fields within a contact, like company or title or city. However, my advanced find window, has only one field, that is "Find names containing". Compared to other examples from what I've seen on the internet, where you can search in the Display Name, First Name, last name, Title, Alias, Company, etc. Also, if I try to choose More Columns radio dial button to have it search for a key word in a different field it appears to do nothing. Do I have to have Exchange to be able to search in other fields of a contact? Thanks . |
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