None of this is particularly new or novel features of OneNote or Outlook but having rediscovered it this week it has already made my work life that little bit easier. By default OneNote installs an add-in on the Outlook toolbar which allows. Then, select where you want to save the new notebook (in the example below, it’s on the PC). This policy disables the OneNote Send to OneNote add-in for Microsoft Outlook.
If you’re using the OneNote app, click the File link on the top bar. Change Manage: COM Add-ins to Manage: Disabled Items in the drop down menu. Give your new notebook a name and click on the Create Notebook button at the bottom.
#HOW TO USE ONENOTE WITH OUTLOOK HOW TO#
If I open the meeting from Outlook, I can now use the Meeting Notes button to have OneNote launched and open the related OneNote page. How to enable OneNote Notes about Outlook items. The relationship between the OneNote page and the Outlook Meeting is also visible from Outlook.
#HOW TO USE ONENOTE WITH OUTLOOK FULL#
The Invitation Message is collapsed, but you can simply click expand to see the full detail of the meeting invite which will often contain an agenda and the link to join the meeting (if it’s an online meeting) And the bit I love most is that all the participants are captured automatically – not only that but take a close look at that participant list, it lets you just check off who is actually in attendance, simple yet brilliant. The page title is set to the email subject, the meeting date/time and location and a link back to the Outlook meeting are automatically captured. Once you select a meeting, the OneNote page is automatically populated for you in a standard way for every meeting by using the contents of the meeting in your Outlook calendar. First thing I do is open up OneNote and create a new page (in the right Notebook/Section) – then rather than trying to remember who I’m meeting with and how to spell their names I can simply use the Meeting Details button and select any of the meeting I have on my calendar for today (or navigate and pick from other days) One feature that’s immediately useful is taking meeting notes in OneNote. If you want to power up Outlook tasks with organization and room for details, integrate the awesome note-taking tool OneNote with Outlook.
I’ve now taken the time to revert back to the Desktop version of OneNote and loving the features the app version had been missing. Outlook’s tasks feature is pretty simple and basic. This once represented the future of OneNote until Microsoft changed direction and re-stated that future investment would be in the original desktop version of OneNote. I’d been using the ‘modern’ OneNote (Win 10 App that you could get from Windows Store).
This isn’t new functionality of OneNote/Outlook but I’ve just re-discovered it.