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Dylan Bayliff
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Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Jan 01, 2016

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Page 1: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Dylan Bayliff

Page 2: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Contents:1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette2- Staying safe and Accessing email3- Open emails4- Replying to emails5- Setting up contacts6- Use of CC and BCC7- Attaching files8- Forward emails9- Digital signature10- Automatic replies11- Use folders to save emails12- Use of high and low importance13+14- Archiving

Page 3: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Sending emails and using ettiquette

Page 4: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Send when done

Rules:• Do not speak using text or slang

words• Use a suitable subject in the

subject line• Add signatures to emails• Set up contacts• Use CC and BCC• Use high & low importance• Use folders to store emails

Etiquette:• Start all emails by addressing

the reader• Use paragraphs• End all emails with ‘Kind

regards, regards or thanks’ followed by your own name

• Use capital letters where appropriate

• Keep passwords safe and don’t share with others

• Passwords must be changed on a regular basis and follow company guidelines on setting strong passwords.

All emails must follow company procedures to ensure that every single email that leaves the company looks professional

Page 5: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Staying safe and accessing email

Page 6: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

How to access your email account:Enter your email website (e.g. Gmail, Hotmail, Outlook etc) Enter your account detailsNEVER give your password to anyone except yourself, this will prevent hacking etc.Make sure your language is set to English (United Kingdom) and the current time zone is set to (GMT) Greenwich Mean Time and then click ok

To create a strong password, you must have:• A minimum of 8 characters long• Combines upper and lower case letters• It includes at least one number• Contains alphanumeric characters (!£&*)

This is the email homepage, all of your emails will come through here. To open a message, just double click on it

Page 7: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Open emails

Page 8: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

This is the E-mail homepage, all of your emails will come through here. To open a message, just double click on it. You can keep a record of what comes through and what mail you have read and what you have not.

Click the email you want to open to highlight it.

Double click it to open

Page 9: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Replying to emails

Page 10: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Replying to emails is important if you want to communicate with other people. It is a very quick way of getting in touch and allows you to send and receive emails quickly and reliably. Simply type your message and press send!

Page 11: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Setting up contacts

Page 12: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.
Page 13: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Use of CC and BCC

Page 14: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Cc is shorthand for carbon copy. If you add a recipient to this box in an Outlook email message, a copy of the message is sent to that recipient, and the recipient's name is visible to other recipients of the message.Bcc is shorthand for blind carbon copy. If you add a recipient to this box in an email message, a copy of the message is sent to that recipient, and the recipient's name isn’t visible to other recipients of the message. If the Bcc box isn't visible when you create a message, you can add it by clicking the Options tab, and then in the Show Fields group, click Bcc.

Page 15: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Attaching emails

Page 16: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

1) Start up a new email

2) Add contact details and a message (including a subject

3) Use the attach button

4) Choose what file to attach and double click it

5) It is then attached, press send and you're done.

Attaching a file allows you to share documents and photos with other people. It is very useful when you need to copy work from others or just enjoy some shared photos.

Page 17: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Forward emails

Page 18: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Forwarding emails is the operation of re-sending an email to either the person who sent it in the first place or a completely different person. When you forward a message, the message includes any attachments that were included with the original message. This is useful because you can send exactly the same email to another person and share it without spending a lot of time typing it out as this is a more efficient and convenient use of time

1.On the Home or Message tab, in the Respond group, click Forward. Note The name of the tab depends on whether the message is selected in the message list or opened in its own window.2.Enter recipients in the To, Cc, or Bcc boxes.3.Compose your message.4.Click Send.

Page 19: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Digital signature

Page 20: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

1.Open up options in your email homepage.

2.Then click settings,

3. Then you need to write your digital signature, arrange the font, colour ect, and then click the ‘Automatically include my signature on messages I send’.

4. save your settings and then whenever you send an email, your signature will be there at the bottom of the screen.

Page 21: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Automatic replies

Page 22: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Automatic replies are very useful especially in a large business where you may not have time to reply to every single individual email.

1 .Go to options and select ‘Set automatic replies’

2. Type the message that you want to be sent to the user who emails you

2. Click ‘Send automatic reply messages to senders outside my organisation’.

3. Click send replies to all external senders, Then save.

Page 23: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Use of folders to store emails

Page 24: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

You can use folders to save emails that you have been sent in certain places that are organised.

1) Right click, and scroll to ‘move to folder’

2) Choose what folder to place it in

3) Click the ‘move’ button

Page 25: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Use of high and low importance

Page 26: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.
Page 27: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Inbox Rules

Page 28: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

1) Click ‘New’

2) Choose an appropriate field

3) Choose an appropriate action

4) Add words that you need deleted, sent or redirected.

Continued on next slide…

Page 29: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

5) 6)

7)

5) Choose ‘Add’ after each word

6) Choose an appropriate place to store the email

7) Click save and you’re done.

Using an inbox rule helps you to automatically perform specific actions on messages as they arrive, based on criteria you select.This helps you to filter any bad words or unwanted spam through your inbox and send them straight to the junk folder.

Page 30: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

Archiving email

Page 31: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

There are quite a few unread emails, these should all be read and deleted if needed to maintain good inbox format

These deleted items need attention and to be deleted from the deleted items folder

This exclamation mark means high importance and should be read immediately

An in-box rule has been created to send certain e-mails that regularly arrive that are spam. They all go to the Junk Mail folder.

Page 32: Dylan Bayliff. Contents: 1- Sending Emails & Using etiquette 2- Staying safe and Accessing email 3- Open emails 4- Replying to emails 5- Setting up contacts.

BASIC RULES:Company Policy (Acceptable Use Policy)

Decide what mail is important – read messages with high importance first then you can save the message in to an appropriate folder or delete itSet up in-box rules for dealing with spam/unwanted messages from people who usually send spam/insultsKeep your in-box organised, move mail in to folders or delete messages regularly.Permanently remove ‘Deleted Items’ once you are sure the messages are no longer needed. (following company policy all unwanted e-mails should be archived/saved or permanently removed at the end of each month)

All e-mails with attachments should be dealt with appropriately, the attachment saved to a folder and the e-mail then deleted. (Company e-mail etiquette rules state that e-mail with attachments from unknown sources should be deleted immediately.)

This is the deleted items folder showing messages that have been dealt with .