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#1
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Hello group,
I have a rather large inbox (3000+ items) with emails pertaining to a number of different clients. Typically, all documents relating to a client (eg. Word files, PDFs etc) are stored in a specific client folder. Nothing particularly complex about this, merely an alphabetically organised set of folders in Windows (XP). I would like to know if there is a way of exporting or copying the emails in my inbox, specific to a client, to the client's folder. It doesn't really matter what format they are in, provided they can be read as before, and the basics (To, From, Time, Date etc) are preserved. I could then delete the emails from my inbox. I've tried selecting multiple messages in Outlook then using a print to PDF option - but when I do this I only have the option to print "Table Style", which basically outputs a list of the emails, but not their contents. Neither does the "Export" function appear to have what I am looking for either. Does anyone have any ideas? Regards, Tanel. |
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#2
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Do you want them in Outlook MSG format or a universal format?
Outlook format: drag and drop to the folder. PDF format: Select the messages and choose File, page set up, memo style. Other methods: Select all and use File Save as - this creates a txt file of all the messages. It's not the easiest to read though. If you have Acrobat you can save as a package. This prints all messages as individual messages into 1 PDF. Archive to HTML or RTF format. See http://www.slipstick.com/addins/housekeeping.asp for tools you can use. -- Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook] Need Help with Common Tasks? http://www.outlook-tips.net/beginner/ Outlook 2007: http://www.slipstick.com/outlook/ol2007/ Outlook Tips by email: EMO - a weekly newsletter about Outlook and Exchange: Outlook Tips: http://www.outlook-tips.net/ Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com You can access this newsgroup by visiting http://www.microsoft.com/office/comm...s/default.mspx or point your newsreader to msnews.microsoft.com. "Tanel Kagan" wrote in message ... Hello group, I have a rather large inbox (3000+ items) with emails pertaining to a number of different clients. Typically, all documents relating to a client (eg. Word files, PDFs etc) are stored in a specific client folder. Nothing particularly complex about this, merely an alphabetically organised set of folders in Windows (XP). I would like to know if there is a way of exporting or copying the emails in my inbox, specific to a client, to the client's folder. It doesn't really matter what format they are in, provided they can be read as before, and the basics (To, From, Time, Date etc) are preserved. I could then delete the emails from my inbox. I've tried selecting multiple messages in Outlook then using a print to PDF option - but when I do this I only have the option to print "Table Style", which basically outputs a list of the emails, but not their contents. Neither does the "Export" function appear to have what I am looking for either. Does anyone have any ideas? Regards, Tanel. |
#3
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Thanks Diane - the "drag and drop" approach never occurred to me, it's
almost too simple. For now, that seems to do the trick, provided I can re-open those emails later with Outlook then it's no problem keeping them as MSG files. I might later look into the archive as RTF format option. Would RTF take up less space than the MSG format? Many thanks again, Tanel. "Diane Poremsky [MVP]" wrote in message ... Do you want them in Outlook MSG format or a universal format? Outlook format: drag and drop to the folder. PDF format: Select the messages and choose File, page set up, memo style. Other methods: Select all and use File Save as - this creates a txt file of all the messages. It's not the easiest to read though. If you have Acrobat you can save as a package. This prints all messages as individual messages into 1 PDF. Archive to HTML or RTF format. See http://www.slipstick.com/addins/housekeeping.asp for tools you can use. -- Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook] Need Help with Common Tasks? http://www.outlook-tips.net/beginner/ Outlook 2007: http://www.slipstick.com/outlook/ol2007/ Outlook Tips by email: EMO - a weekly newsletter about Outlook and Exchange: Outlook Tips: http://www.outlook-tips.net/ Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com You can access this newsgroup by visiting http://www.microsoft.com/office/comm...s/default.mspx or point your newsreader to msnews.microsoft.com. "Tanel Kagan" wrote in message ... Hello group, I have a rather large inbox (3000+ items) with emails pertaining to a number of different clients. Typically, all documents relating to a client (eg. Word files, PDFs etc) are stored in a specific client folder. Nothing particularly complex about this, merely an alphabetically organised set of folders in Windows (XP). I would like to know if there is a way of exporting or copying the emails in my inbox, specific to a client, to the client's folder. It doesn't really matter what format they are in, provided they can be read as before, and the basics (To, From, Time, Date etc) are preserved. I could then delete the emails from my inbox. I've tried selecting multiple messages in Outlook then using a print to PDF option - but when I do this I only have the option to print "Table Style", which basically outputs a list of the emails, but not their contents. Neither does the "Export" function appear to have what I am looking for either. Does anyone have any ideas? Regards, Tanel. |
#4
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RTF would be smaller, but not enough for me to choose it over dragging
messages, unless I needed to read them without outlook. I'd print to PDF as my first choice of universal format. MSG files are larger in the file system than in outlook -my samples were 50 KB in outlook = 86 kb on the drive = 97 in a PDF package or 41 KB printed to PDF. They can all be zipped if space is at a premium. -- 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. "Tanel Kagan" wrote in message ... Thanks Diane - the "drag and drop" approach never occurred to me, it's almost too simple. For now, that seems to do the trick, provided I can re-open those emails later with Outlook then it's no problem keeping them as MSG files. I might later look into the archive as RTF format option. Would RTF take up less space than the MSG format? Many thanks again, Tanel. "Diane Poremsky [MVP]" wrote in message ... Do you want them in Outlook MSG format or a universal format? Outlook format: drag and drop to the folder. PDF format: Select the messages and choose File, page set up, memo style. Other methods: Select all and use File Save as - this creates a txt file of all the messages. It's not the easiest to read though. If you have Acrobat you can save as a package. This prints all messages as individual messages into 1 PDF. Archive to HTML or RTF format. See http://www.slipstick.com/addins/housekeeping.asp for tools you can use. -- Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook] Need Help with Common Tasks? http://www.outlook-tips.net/beginner/ Outlook 2007: http://www.slipstick.com/outlook/ol2007/ Outlook Tips by email: EMO - a weekly newsletter about Outlook and Exchange: Outlook Tips: http://www.outlook-tips.net/ Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com You can access this newsgroup by visiting http://www.microsoft.com/office/comm...s/default.mspx or point your newsreader to msnews.microsoft.com. "Tanel Kagan" wrote in message ... Hello group, I have a rather large inbox (3000+ items) with emails pertaining to a number of different clients. Typically, all documents relating to a client (eg. Word files, PDFs etc) are stored in a specific client folder. Nothing particularly complex about this, merely an alphabetically organised set of folders in Windows (XP). I would like to know if there is a way of exporting or copying the emails in my inbox, specific to a client, to the client's folder. It doesn't really matter what format they are in, provided they can be read as before, and the basics (To, From, Time, Date etc) are preserved. I could then delete the emails from my inbox. I've tried selecting multiple messages in Outlook then using a print to PDF option - but when I do this I only have the option to print "Table Style", which basically outputs a list of the emails, but not their contents. Neither does the "Export" function appear to have what I am looking for either. Does anyone have any ideas? Regards, Tanel. |
#5
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Diane, I have encountered some difficulties here.
First of all, it seems that I can't use the "memo style" for printing - which includes printing to PDF, because many of the messages are HTML formatted. That's what Outlook tells me anyway. In future I could ensure that everything is plain text formatted but I don't seem to be able to retroactively convert HTML messages to plain text. That leaves the drag and drop option. There seem to be two problems with drag and drop:- 1) Let's say I've got 20 messages which are being copied to a client folder. When they get to the destination folder, they are named according to subject, and where the subject is the same they are named "[subject] (1)", "[subject] (2)" and so on. Though the subject line is preserved as the file name, there is no indication as to who is the sender (or recipient). 2) That is a niggle, but there is bigger problem. The new MSG files now have new date/time attributes, i.e. the current date/time, which is when they are "created". In other words, the drag/drop option does not preserve the date/time information of the original messages. This information is of course in the body of the message, but there is no way to sort and organise by date/time without opening each message individually. Any ways round this or will I just have to accept it and move on? :-) Tanel. "Diane Poremsky [MVP]" wrote in message ... RTF would be smaller, but not enough for me to choose it over dragging messages, unless I needed to read them without outlook. I'd print to PDF as my first choice of universal format. MSG files are larger in the file system than in outlook -my samples were 50 KB in outlook = 86 kb on the drive = 97 in a PDF package or 41 KB printed to PDF. They can all be zipped if space is at a premium. -- 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. "Tanel Kagan" wrote in message ... Thanks Diane - the "drag and drop" approach never occurred to me, it's almost too simple. For now, that seems to do the trick, provided I can re-open those emails later with Outlook then it's no problem keeping them as MSG files. I might later look into the archive as RTF format option. Would RTF take up less space than the MSG format? Many thanks again, Tanel. "Diane Poremsky [MVP]" wrote in message ... Do you want them in Outlook MSG format or a universal format? Outlook format: drag and drop to the folder. PDF format: Select the messages and choose File, page set up, memo style. Other methods: Select all and use File Save as - this creates a txt file of all the messages. It's not the easiest to read though. If you have Acrobat you can save as a package. This prints all messages as individual messages into 1 PDF. Archive to HTML or RTF format. See http://www.slipstick.com/addins/housekeeping.asp for tools you can use. -- Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook] Need Help with Common Tasks? http://www.outlook-tips.net/beginner/ Outlook 2007: http://www.slipstick.com/outlook/ol2007/ Outlook Tips by email: EMO - a weekly newsletter about Outlook and Exchange: Outlook Tips: http://www.outlook-tips.net/ Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com You can access this newsgroup by visiting http://www.microsoft.com/office/comm...s/default.mspx or point your newsreader to msnews.microsoft.com. "Tanel Kagan" wrote in message ... Hello group, I have a rather large inbox (3000+ items) with emails pertaining to a number of different clients. Typically, all documents relating to a client (eg. Word files, PDFs etc) are stored in a specific client folder. Nothing particularly complex about this, merely an alphabetically organised set of folders in Windows (XP). I would like to know if there is a way of exporting or copying the emails in my inbox, specific to a client, to the client's folder. It doesn't really matter what format they are in, provided they can be read as before, and the basics (To, From, Time, Date etc) are preserved. I could then delete the emails from my inbox. I've tried selecting multiple messages in Outlook then using a print to PDF option - but when I do this I only have the option to print "Table Style", which basically outputs a list of the emails, but not their contents. Neither does the "Export" function appear to have what I am looking for either. Does anyone have any ideas? Regards, Tanel. |
#6
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I believe some archive utilities can be configured to use the senders name
and the message date and time - but the file system only picks up the subject as the file name. It doesn't see the message date or sender's name. See http://www.slipstick.com/addins/housekeeping.asp for archive utilities. -- 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. "Tanel Kagan" wrote in message ... Diane, I have encountered some difficulties here. First of all, it seems that I can't use the "memo style" for printing - which includes printing to PDF, because many of the messages are HTML formatted. That's what Outlook tells me anyway. In future I could ensure that everything is plain text formatted but I don't seem to be able to retroactively convert HTML messages to plain text. That leaves the drag and drop option. There seem to be two problems with drag and drop:- 1) Let's say I've got 20 messages which are being copied to a client folder. When they get to the destination folder, they are named according to subject, and where the subject is the same they are named "[subject] (1)", "[subject] (2)" and so on. Though the subject line is preserved as the file name, there is no indication as to who is the sender (or recipient). 2) That is a niggle, but there is bigger problem. The new MSG files now have new date/time attributes, i.e. the current date/time, which is when they are "created". In other words, the drag/drop option does not preserve the date/time information of the original messages. This information is of course in the body of the message, but there is no way to sort and organise by date/time without opening each message individually. Any ways round this or will I just have to accept it and move on? :-) Tanel. "Diane Poremsky [MVP]" wrote in message ... RTF would be smaller, but not enough for me to choose it over dragging messages, unless I needed to read them without outlook. I'd print to PDF as my first choice of universal format. MSG files are larger in the file system than in outlook -my samples were 50 KB in outlook = 86 kb on the drive = 97 in a PDF package or 41 KB printed to PDF. They can all be zipped if space is at a premium. -- 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. "Tanel Kagan" wrote in message ... Thanks Diane - the "drag and drop" approach never occurred to me, it's almost too simple. For now, that seems to do the trick, provided I can re-open those emails later with Outlook then it's no problem keeping them as MSG files. I might later look into the archive as RTF format option. Would RTF take up less space than the MSG format? Many thanks again, Tanel. "Diane Poremsky [MVP]" wrote in message ... Do you want them in Outlook MSG format or a universal format? Outlook format: drag and drop to the folder. PDF format: Select the messages and choose File, page set up, memo style. Other methods: Select all and use File Save as - this creates a txt file of all the messages. It's not the easiest to read though. If you have Acrobat you can save as a package. This prints all messages as individual messages into 1 PDF. Archive to HTML or RTF format. See http://www.slipstick.com/addins/housekeeping.asp for tools you can use. -- Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook] Need Help with Common Tasks? http://www.outlook-tips.net/beginner/ Outlook 2007: http://www.slipstick.com/outlook/ol2007/ Outlook Tips by email: EMO - a weekly newsletter about Outlook and Exchange: Outlook Tips: http://www.outlook-tips.net/ Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com You can access this newsgroup by visiting http://www.microsoft.com/office/comm...s/default.mspx or point your newsreader to msnews.microsoft.com. "Tanel Kagan" wrote in message ... Hello group, I have a rather large inbox (3000+ items) with emails pertaining to a number of different clients. Typically, all documents relating to a client (eg. Word files, PDFs etc) are stored in a specific client folder. Nothing particularly complex about this, merely an alphabetically organised set of folders in Windows (XP). I would like to know if there is a way of exporting or copying the emails in my inbox, specific to a client, to the client's folder. It doesn't really matter what format they are in, provided they can be read as before, and the basics (To, From, Time, Date etc) are preserved. I could then delete the emails from my inbox. I've tried selecting multiple messages in Outlook then using a print to PDF option - but when I do this I only have the option to print "Table Style", which basically outputs a list of the emails, but not their contents. Neither does the "Export" function appear to have what I am looking for either. Does anyone have any ideas? Regards, Tanel. |
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