Managing multiple accounts

  • Thread starter Thread starter Steve Freides
  • Start date Start date
S

Steve Freides

I recently acquired a mailbox at a client's domain. I want the mail I
receive at this address to be completely separate in Outlook (2002). How do
I tell Outlook that I'd like a separate folder structure for this? I'd like
only to see my main, default account when I start Outlook and be required to
switch something so that I can do all the send/receive as well as view and
manage messages for the other account.

Thanks in advance.

-S-
http://www.kbnj.com
 
You did not state the version of Outlook or the mail support mode. If
Outlook 2000 or 98, you need to use Corporate mode and profiles. Profiles
will work for both 2002 and 2003 to keep your mail separate.

--
Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]

Post all replies to the group to keep the discussion intact.


After searching google.groups.com and finding no answer:
Steve Freides <[email protected]> asked:
| I recently acquired a mailbox at a client's domain. I want the mail I
| receive at this address to be completely separate in Outlook (2002).
| How do I tell Outlook that I'd like a separate folder structure for
| this? I'd like only to see my main, default account when I start
| Outlook and be required to switch something so that I can do all the
| send/receive as well as view and manage messages for the other
| account.
|
| Thanks in advance.
|
| -S-
| http://www.kbnj.com
 
I thought saying
Outlook (2002)

was version-specific enough. I'm using Outlook 2002.

I don't know what a mail support mode is - sounds like an athletic
supporter. :)

OK, I looked in the help and found a bit about Profiles - it looks like I'll
have to start Outlook with one or the other profile - is that correct?
That's not what I'm after but if that's as good as it gets it will do. At
the moment I have one profile named Outlook and two email accounts within
that profile.

Is Outlook 2003 better in this regard? I have it sitting here and could
easily enough install it and use it instead of 2002.

-S-
http://www.kbnj.com


"Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]"
You did not state the version of Outlook or the mail support mode. If
Outlook 2000 or 98, you need to use Corporate mode and profiles. Profiles
will work for both 2002 and 2003 to keep your mail separate.

--
Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]

Post all replies to the group to keep the discussion intact.


After searching google.groups.com and finding no answer:
Steve Freides <[email protected]> asked:
| I recently acquired a mailbox at a client's domain. I want the mail I
| receive at this address to be completely separate in Outlook (2002).
| How do I tell Outlook that I'd like a separate folder structure for
| this? I'd like only to see my main, default account when I start
| Outlook and be required to switch something so that I can do all the
| send/receive as well as view and manage messages for the other
| account.
|
| Thanks in advance.
|
| -S-
| http://www.kbnj.com
 
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