Chip,
Glad you joined in.  There really are so many options in Outlook that I think 
this will take time.  I've marked a few messages for follow-up in the same way 
you mentioned.  I have found that even if I marke them  complete, they stay on 
the to do list, so I think it's actually better to remove the flag versus to 
mark is complete. On a video tutorial I listened to, the narrator said that 
completed items were maintained so that you had a quick way of looking up what 
you had accomplished, but I haven't gotten around to figuring out how to 
organize my to do list so that the completed aren't right there at the top.  
Unless I reorder my columns, I have to hear a bunch of information before I 
hear the status.  I'll have to try re-ordering, but I haven't found that in 
Outlook yet.

It's also interesting to me that there is a To do list and a Task list in 
Outlook.  I'm not sure what subtle different was intended by the designers.   I 
like your idea of using control y to get to that.  I had been doing control 4 
to get to tasks.

Finally, I'm glad you reiterated that I can copy items to another folder.  I 
had been told this was not possible in Outlook; not sure why I took that 
comment at face value.  FYI, you did not mentioned the Control Shift V options 
for moving messages.  I prefer that key combo when moving, but I think your 
reminder of control c to really copy is a winner of  tip today.


From: Chip Orange [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Saturday, April 19, 2014 7:00 PM
To: Van Lant, Robin
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: RE: Seeking suggestions on how to keep track of emails you are waiting 
for responses from

Hi Robin,

Sorry I'm so late in joining the discussion.

I have been playing around with Outlook 2010 and its options for following up, 
and I've found them quite usable.

What I do is to right click a message (I actually did this with your message to 
the list), which brings up the message context menu.  (you can use the 
applications key to the right of the space bar, or shift-f10).

In this menu I choose the "follow-up" submenu, and then one of the choices by 
date (which will popup a reminder for you based on the date), or the choice for 
"no date".

In either case, at any time later you can use the "go to folder" option to go 
to your "to-do list folder" (I use control-Y for the go to folder), and in 
there will be all these emails you've marked for follow-up.  I just pressed 
enter on yours, and even though I had a rule which had placed it in a folder 
for this lists messages, it took me directly into your message.  I'll see after 
this answer if I have to manually remove it from my "to-do" list, or if just 
responding is enough to handle that.  I think this works very well.

Also, as someone mentioned, you can copy an email message to another folder if 
you like; just use the ctrl-c to copy the message when you're positioned on it 
in the list, and then go to the other folder and use the ctrl-v to paste it 
there.  You can also move messages this way if you only want the one copy 
(sometimes this way is more convenient, but you can also right click a message 
and use the context menu's "move" choice).

Hth,

Chip


From: Van Lant, Robin [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, April 16, 2014 12:22 PM
To: GW-info List - GW Micro ([email protected])
Subject: Seeking suggestions on how to keep track of emails you are waiting for 
responses from

Hi,
Here at work I often send emails that I want to stay on top of to ensure I get 
a response - requested information or action from another person not just a 
read receipt.
In my old email client, I had a system that worked pretty well that allowed me 
to save a 2nd copy of an email was sending to a follow-up folder, not just the 
sent mail folder.  When I looked in this follow-up folder, I'd see who the 
email was too, the subject and so forth, so it was easy to see who I was 
waiting on and the topic.  In Outlook, emails can only reside in one folder, 
unless you send a copy to yourself and then move that copy to a new folder.  
Downside of that is that I wouldn't see who the email is to at a glance, just 
that it was from me and the topic.

I'm going thru some tutorials on categories and flags in Outlook.  They  seem 
pretty cool, but fairly visually based.  I'm trying to use flags to add emails 
to my to-do list in Outlook for follow up.  It's not great, but doable as it 
only displays the email subject line and I have to go back into sent mail to 
add the flag after it's sent.

Wondering if any of you  have found better options for this.


Robin Van Lant | Sr. Program Manager
Strategy & Performance Management | Key Equipment Finance
720-304-1060 | [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>



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