Manage time with Outlook

04/10/2009 send to a friend
Friend of Enterprise Nation, Paula Jones, is hosting a one hour webinar on 15th October. It’s on the topic of how to control your time, with the help of Outlook. As Paula points out, it’s a 15 extravaganza; being held on 15th October at 15.00 hours and there are only 15 places up for grabs at £15 a pop!
Is your email getting the better of you and appointments sliding out of your control?
This one hour webinar will help you take control of your time, get more done, and worry less about what you may have missed.
There are only 15 places available so if you’re interested, please email Paula at info@6thlevel.co.uk and you’ll be sent a payment link and meeting code.
There is no software you need to download to your computer for the online session; you just need to ensure you can hear the webinar. This will be recorded for you to download later and Paula will also be providing follow up support.
Add a comment
* Denotes a mandatory fieldWhat's Related
- 10 apps to connect your home office with the world
- Cloud Computing: what does it offer your home business?
- 7 cool things you can do with Google Search
- OMG! Are you AOK for CRM?
- Are you ready to 'ditch Excel' and manage your accounts online?
- 3 ways to collaborate online
- Cloud Computing: Are you in the Cloud?
- Digital outsourcing: Programs that help move you forward
- Is it time to switch to Google Docs?
- The Good Web Guide to avoiding fraud at Christmas
Latest from the Forum
-
01/09/2010 by | Why Business Networking is Still King
-
01/09/2010 by | Help! Selling abroad but....
-
01/09/2010 by | Do I really need a Business Plan?




Comments
Author: Sam
Date: 16/10/2009
Comment: I don't think Outlook should even be in the category for managing how to manage email and appointements, it's rubbish, dated, and expensive software.
It will easily set you back a few hundred pounds in Office, it is slow, it is not future proof, it is riddled with many critical flaws (see http://fixoutlook.org ), and like most Microsoft software, it is prone to errors and crashing.
Software that is served through your browser is key to management, as you can't take Outlook with you when your not in the office! Google Apps Premium for example has Mail, Contacts, Calendar(s) which can be accessed anywhere and synced on any device, and can be shared with colleages - Outlook can't do that unless you have Microsoft Exchange, which will easily set you back a further 60 quid a year at least, where as Google Apps is only £35 a year, and you don't need any software. Google Mail has the best spam protection in the industry, where as Outlooks protection is barely minimal.
I think Paula should focus on online providers rather than Outlook, another advantage is even for weak computer users, web-based apps don't require ANY configuration, where as in Outlook you need to setup your provider settings. Outlook will not back up your contacts either, so if your computer is damaged or stolen, so is the data on it.
Website: