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Compound Salutations (Title Field) with Outlook 2003
Using Outlook 2003, complete installation. There are no error
messages, warnings or any other nuisances to indicate an incomplete or erroneous setup of Outlook 2003. With that said... here's what I need help with: Holiday season is upon us and so are people who want to do Holiday Card mail merges with MS-Word and MS-Outlook. In my situation, the vast majority of Holiday Cards are going to home addresses and a significant number of these people are married. I'm looking for suggestions on how to get the "Mr. and Mrs." or "Dr. and Mrs." etc. to come out properly during the mail merge. I would prefer to use the existing Outlook 2003 Data Structure with minimal 'tweaking'. I am trying to -avoid- creating extra contact entries for spouses or populating the spouse field with the prefix "and Mrs." The idea is to keep only one contact record for a given person which may have both a business and a home address, but have Outlook know that when I'm using the Home Address in the formal capacity of a Holiday Card, the proper salutation for a married couple is "Mr. and Mrs.," "Dr. and Mrs.," etc. So! I bring it to the readers and hope someone has a viable solution or knows that Oulook 2003 has this capacity but it's been buried so deep I simply cannot find it. Thank you! --Patrick Hughes |
Compound Salutations (Title Field) with Outlook 2003
Why don't you just configure the Title field in the Outlook Contact Record
to be exactly what you want for each Contact you intend to include in the merge? You do not have to accept Outlook's defaults. Just type in what you want it to be. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] wrote in message ups.com... Using Outlook 2003, complete installation. There are no error messages, warnings or any other nuisances to indicate an incomplete or erroneous setup of Outlook 2003. With that said... here's what I need help with: Holiday season is upon us and so are people who want to do Holiday Card mail merges with MS-Word and MS-Outlook. In my situation, the vast majority of Holiday Cards are going to home addresses and a significant number of these people are married. I'm looking for suggestions on how to get the "Mr. and Mrs." or "Dr. and Mrs." etc. to come out properly during the mail merge. I would prefer to use the existing Outlook 2003 Data Structure with minimal 'tweaking'. I am trying to -avoid- creating extra contact entries for spouses or populating the spouse field with the prefix "and Mrs." The idea is to keep only one contact record for a given person which may have both a business and a home address, but have Outlook know that when I'm using the Home Address in the formal capacity of a Holiday Card, the proper salutation for a married couple is "Mr. and Mrs.," "Dr. and Mrs.," etc. So! I bring it to the readers and hope someone has a viable solution or knows that Oulook 2003 has this capacity but it's been buried so deep I simply cannot find it. Thank you! --Patrick Hughes |
Compound Salutations (Title Field) with Outlook 2003
Russ, thank you very much for posting a reply. I do appreciate it.
I had considered your recommendation but here's the twist... Any given contact record may be primarily a business contact, in which case preserving the singular "Mr." or "Ms." is desirable for mailings to a person's business address. This is sounding more and more like I'll need to use a custom field for Personal Salutations. Does that sound about right? --Patrick Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] wrote: Why don't you just configure the Title field in the Outlook Contact Record to be exactly what you want for each Contact you intend to include in the merge? You do not have to accept Outlook's defaults. Just type in what you want it to be. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] wrote in message ups.com... Using Outlook 2003, complete installation. There are no error messages, warnings or any other nuisances to indicate an incomplete or erroneous setup of Outlook 2003. With that said... here's what I need help with: Holiday season is upon us and so are people who want to do Holiday Card mail merges with MS-Word and MS-Outlook. In my situation, the vast majority of Holiday Cards are going to home addresses and a significant number of these people are married. I'm looking for suggestions on how to get the "Mr. and Mrs." or "Dr. and Mrs." etc. to come out properly during the mail merge. I would prefer to use the existing Outlook 2003 Data Structure with minimal 'tweaking'. I am trying to -avoid- creating extra contact entries for spouses or populating the spouse field with the prefix "and Mrs." The idea is to keep only one contact record for a given person which may have both a business and a home address, but have Outlook know that when I'm using the Home Address in the formal capacity of a Holiday Card, the proper salutation for a married couple is "Mr. and Mrs.," "Dr. and Mrs.," etc. So! I bring it to the readers and hope someone has a viable solution or knows that Oulook 2003 has this capacity but it's been buried so deep I simply cannot find it. Thank you! --Patrick Hughes |
Compound Salutations (Title Field) with Outlook 2003
It's probably best if you post all of the information you want us to
consider up front instead of just making us guess what you're thinking and trickling in relevant information a little at a time. We're all pretty busy here. When you use a term like "business contact" that means you are using BCM. Are you? If not, spell out your real question in painfully complete detail. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] wrote in message oups.com... Russ, thank you very much for posting a reply. I do appreciate it. I had considered your recommendation but here's the twist... Any given contact record may be primarily a business contact, in which case preserving the singular "Mr." or "Ms." is desirable for mailings to a person's business address. This is sounding more and more like I'll need to use a custom field for Personal Salutations. Does that sound about right? --Patrick Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] wrote: Why don't you just configure the Title field in the Outlook Contact Record to be exactly what you want for each Contact you intend to include in the merge? You do not have to accept Outlook's defaults. Just type in what you want it to be. -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] wrote in message ups.com... Using Outlook 2003, complete installation. There are no error messages, warnings or any other nuisances to indicate an incomplete or erroneous setup of Outlook 2003. With that said... here's what I need help with: Holiday season is upon us and so are people who want to do Holiday Card mail merges with MS-Word and MS-Outlook. In my situation, the vast majority of Holiday Cards are going to home addresses and a significant number of these people are married. I'm looking for suggestions on how to get the "Mr. and Mrs." or "Dr. and Mrs." etc. to come out properly during the mail merge. I would prefer to use the existing Outlook 2003 Data Structure with minimal 'tweaking'. I am trying to -avoid- creating extra contact entries for spouses or populating the spouse field with the prefix "and Mrs." The idea is to keep only one contact record for a given person which may have both a business and a home address, but have Outlook know that when I'm using the Home Address in the formal capacity of a Holiday Card, the proper salutation for a married couple is "Mr. and Mrs.," "Dr. and Mrs.," etc. So! I bring it to the readers and hope someone has a viable solution or knows that Oulook 2003 has this capacity but it's been buried so deep I simply cannot find it. Thank you! --Patrick Hughes |
Compound Salutations (Title Field) with Outlook 2003
Short answer:
Outlook has no capability to/provision for: #1 - Multiple saluations via standard fields #2 - associate a different salutation with a given address type This is a custom scenario which would have to be dealt with via a custom field for a whole raft of reasons not the least of which are determination of marital status (and whether or not a Mr. or Mrs is appropriate for a person's given situation) or whether a primary contact who is a "Mrs." has a Dr. or Mr. for a husband or whether where their are two different surnames involved whatever the marital status etc. Just some sample things to think about if you want to be completely correct when addressing the "household". Karl __________________________________________________ ___________ ContactGenie - Importer 1.3 / DataPorter 2.0 / Exporter "Power contact importers/exporters for MS Outlook '2000/2003" http://www.contactgenie.com wrote in message ups.com... Using Outlook 2003, complete installation. There are no error messages, warnings or any other nuisances to indicate an incomplete or erroneous setup of Outlook 2003. With that said... here's what I need help with: Holiday season is upon us and so are people who want to do Holiday Card mail merges with MS-Word and MS-Outlook. In my situation, the vast majority of Holiday Cards are going to home addresses and a significant number of these people are married. I'm looking for suggestions on how to get the "Mr. and Mrs." or "Dr. and Mrs." etc. to come out properly during the mail merge. I would prefer to use the existing Outlook 2003 Data Structure with minimal 'tweaking'. I am trying to -avoid- creating extra contact entries for spouses or populating the spouse field with the prefix "and Mrs." The idea is to keep only one contact record for a given person which may have both a business and a home address, but have Outlook know that when I'm using the Home Address in the formal capacity of a Holiday Card, the proper salutation for a married couple is "Mr. and Mrs.," "Dr. and Mrs.," etc. So! I bring it to the readers and hope someone has a viable solution or knows that Oulook 2003 has this capacity but it's been buried so deep I simply cannot find it. Thank you! --Patrick Hughes |
Compound Salutations (Title Field) with Outlook 2003
Russ, Karl:
Thank you both for your comments and suggestions. Going to create a custom field for handling salutations as they relate to correspondence of a personal nature to a person/family whose primary relationship is for business purposes. --Patrick Karl Timmermans wrote: Short answer: Outlook has no capability to/provision for: #1 - Multiple saluations via standard fields #2 - associate a different salutation with a given address type This is a custom scenario which would have to be dealt with via a custom field for a whole raft of reasons not the least of which are determination of marital status (and whether or not a Mr. or Mrs is appropriate for a person's given situation) or whether a primary contact who is a "Mrs." has a Dr. or Mr. for a husband or whether where their are two different surnames involved whatever the marital status etc. Just some sample things to think about if you want to be completely correct when addressing the "household". Karl __________________________________________________ ___________ ContactGenie - Importer 1.3 / DataPorter 2.0 / Exporter "Power contact importers/exporters for MS Outlook '2000/2003" http://www.contactgenie.com wrote in message ups.com... Using Outlook 2003, complete installation. There are no error messages, warnings or any other nuisances to indicate an incomplete or erroneous setup of Outlook 2003. With that said... here's what I need help with: Holiday season is upon us and so are people who want to do Holiday Card mail merges with MS-Word and MS-Outlook. In my situation, the vast majority of Holiday Cards are going to home addresses and a significant number of these people are married. I'm looking for suggestions on how to get the "Mr. and Mrs." or "Dr. and Mrs." etc. to come out properly during the mail merge. I would prefer to use the existing Outlook 2003 Data Structure with minimal 'tweaking'. I am trying to -avoid- creating extra contact entries for spouses or populating the spouse field with the prefix "and Mrs." The idea is to keep only one contact record for a given person which may have both a business and a home address, but have Outlook know that when I'm using the Home Address in the formal capacity of a Holiday Card, the proper salutation for a married couple is "Mr. and Mrs.," "Dr. and Mrs.," etc. So! I bring it to the readers and hope someone has a viable solution or knows that Oulook 2003 has this capacity but it's been buried so deep I simply cannot find it. Thank you! --Patrick Hughes |
Compound Salutations (Title Field) with Outlook 2003
I'm having a similar problem in that many of my contacts are female yet I
need to address social correspondence as Mr. and Mrs. (male spouse name) Lastname. The Title problem I can handle, but I can't use the Spouse field or set up a customized field name inside the Full Name block. (If I overwrite the First field in the Full Name block, it replaces my contact's File as name.) Never had a problem with my old WORKS Address Book, but I can't figure out how to get it done in OUTLOOK 2002. " wrote: Russ, Karl: Thank you both for your comments and suggestions. Going to create a custom field for handling salutations as they relate to correspondence of a personal nature to a person/family whose primary relationship is for business purposes. --Patrick Karl Timmermans wrote: Short answer: Outlook has no capability to/provision for: #1 - Multiple saluations via standard fields #2 - associate a different salutation with a given address type This is a custom scenario which would have to be dealt with via a custom field for a whole raft of reasons not the least of which are determination of marital status (and whether or not a Mr. or Mrs is appropriate for a person's given situation) or whether a primary contact who is a "Mrs." has a Dr. or Mr. for a husband or whether where their are two different surnames involved whatever the marital status etc. Just some sample things to think about if you want to be completely correct when addressing the "household". Karl __________________________________________________ ___________ ContactGenie - Importer 1.3 / DataPorter 2.0 / Exporter "Power contact importers/exporters for MS Outlook '2000/2003" http://www.contactgenie.com wrote in message ups.com... Using Outlook 2003, complete installation. There are no error messages, warnings or any other nuisances to indicate an incomplete or erroneous setup of Outlook 2003. With that said... here's what I need help with: Holiday season is upon us and so are people who want to do Holiday Card mail merges with MS-Word and MS-Outlook. In my situation, the vast majority of Holiday Cards are going to home addresses and a significant number of these people are married. I'm looking for suggestions on how to get the "Mr. and Mrs." or "Dr. and Mrs." etc. to come out properly during the mail merge. I would prefer to use the existing Outlook 2003 Data Structure with minimal 'tweaking'. I am trying to -avoid- creating extra contact entries for spouses or populating the spouse field with the prefix "and Mrs." The idea is to keep only one contact record for a given person which may have both a business and a home address, but have Outlook know that when I'm using the Home Address in the formal capacity of a Holiday Card, the proper salutation for a married couple is "Mr. and Mrs.," "Dr. and Mrs.," etc. So! I bring it to the readers and hope someone has a viable solution or knows that Oulook 2003 has this capacity but it's been buried so deep I simply cannot find it. Thank you! --Patrick Hughes |
Compound Salutations (Title Field) with Outlook 2003
Explain why you "can't use the Spouse field."
-- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "SmithBurn" wrote in message ... I'm having a similar problem in that many of my contacts are female yet I need to address social correspondence as Mr. and Mrs. (male spouse name) Lastname. The Title problem I can handle, but I can't use the Spouse field or set up a customized field name inside the Full Name block. (If I overwrite the First field in the Full Name block, it replaces my contact's File as name.) Never had a problem with my old WORKS Address Book, but I can't figure out how to get it done in OUTLOOK 2002. " wrote: Russ, Karl: Thank you both for your comments and suggestions. Going to create a custom field for handling salutations as they relate to correspondence of a personal nature to a person/family whose primary relationship is for business purposes. --Patrick Karl Timmermans wrote: Short answer: Outlook has no capability to/provision for: #1 - Multiple saluations via standard fields #2 - associate a different salutation with a given address type This is a custom scenario which would have to be dealt with via a custom field for a whole raft of reasons not the least of which are determination of marital status (and whether or not a Mr. or Mrs is appropriate for a person's given situation) or whether a primary contact who is a "Mrs." has a Dr. or Mr. for a husband or whether where their are two different surnames involved whatever the marital status etc. Just some sample things to think about if you want to be completely correct when addressing the "household". Karl __________________________________________________ ___________ ContactGenie - Importer 1.3 / DataPorter 2.0 / Exporter "Power contact importers/exporters for MS Outlook '2000/2003" http://www.contactgenie.com wrote in message ups.com... Using Outlook 2003, complete installation. There are no error messages, warnings or any other nuisances to indicate an incomplete or erroneous setup of Outlook 2003. With that said... here's what I need help with: Holiday season is upon us and so are people who want to do Holiday Card mail merges with MS-Word and MS-Outlook. In my situation, the vast majority of Holiday Cards are going to home addresses and a significant number of these people are married. I'm looking for suggestions on how to get the "Mr. and Mrs." or "Dr. and Mrs." etc. to come out properly during the mail merge. I would prefer to use the existing Outlook 2003 Data Structure with minimal 'tweaking'. I am trying to -avoid- creating extra contact entries for spouses or populating the spouse field with the prefix "and Mrs." The idea is to keep only one contact record for a given person which may have both a business and a home address, but have Outlook know that when I'm using the Home Address in the formal capacity of a Holiday Card, the proper salutation for a married couple is "Mr. and Mrs.," "Dr. and Mrs.," etc. So! I bring it to the readers and hope someone has a viable solution or knows that Oulook 2003 has this capacity but it's been buried so deep I simply cannot find it. Thank you! --Patrick Hughes |
Compound Salutations (Title Field) with Outlook 2003
Thank you very much for such a quick reply... Yes, I should be able to use
the Spouse field with Word mail-merge. I just have to think this through a little differently... "Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook]" wrote: Explain why you "can't use the Spouse field." -- Russ Valentine [MVP-Outlook] "SmithBurn" wrote in message ... I'm having a similar problem in that many of my contacts are female yet I need to address social correspondence as Mr. and Mrs. (male spouse name) Lastname. The Title problem I can handle, but I can't use the Spouse field or set up a customized field name inside the Full Name block. (If I overwrite the First field in the Full Name block, it replaces my contact's File as name.) Never had a problem with my old WORKS Address Book, but I can't figure out how to get it done in OUTLOOK 2002. " wrote: Russ, Karl: Thank you both for your comments and suggestions. Going to create a custom field for handling salutations as they relate to correspondence of a personal nature to a person/family whose primary relationship is for business purposes. --Patrick Karl Timmermans wrote: Short answer: Outlook has no capability to/provision for: #1 - Multiple saluations via standard fields #2 - associate a different salutation with a given address type This is a custom scenario which would have to be dealt with via a custom field for a whole raft of reasons not the least of which are determination of marital status (and whether or not a Mr. or Mrs is appropriate for a person's given situation) or whether a primary contact who is a "Mrs." has a Dr. or Mr. for a husband or whether where their are two different surnames involved whatever the marital status etc. Just some sample things to think about if you want to be completely correct when addressing the "household". Karl __________________________________________________ ___________ ContactGenie - Importer 1.3 / DataPorter 2.0 / Exporter "Power contact importers/exporters for MS Outlook '2000/2003" http://www.contactgenie.com wrote in message ups.com... Using Outlook 2003, complete installation. There are no error messages, warnings or any other nuisances to indicate an incomplete or erroneous setup of Outlook 2003. With that said... here's what I need help with: Holiday season is upon us and so are people who want to do Holiday Card mail merges with MS-Word and MS-Outlook. In my situation, the vast majority of Holiday Cards are going to home addresses and a significant number of these people are married. I'm looking for suggestions on how to get the "Mr. and Mrs." or "Dr. and Mrs." etc. to come out properly during the mail merge. I would prefer to use the existing Outlook 2003 Data Structure with minimal 'tweaking'. I am trying to -avoid- creating extra contact entries for spouses or populating the spouse field with the prefix "and Mrs." The idea is to keep only one contact record for a given person which may have both a business and a home address, but have Outlook know that when I'm using the Home Address in the formal capacity of a Holiday Card, the proper salutation for a married couple is "Mr. and Mrs.," "Dr. and Mrs.," etc. So! I bring it to the readers and hope someone has a viable solution or knows that Oulook 2003 has this capacity but it's been buried so deep I simply cannot find it. Thank you! --Patrick Hughes |
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