N
nuge
hey all, hoping someone can give me some advice on how to tackle a
productivity issue I've been running into. I rprinted this in an earlier
post, but it seems to have disappeared on my despite my searches and
bookmarks to microsoft communities. Does anyone know a quick way to find all
my posts?
2 times a week, I have to generate a single report comprised of the
following seperate documents:
1 word doc
2 excel spreadsheets
1 outlook calendar (weekly view)
1 MS project document.
It currently takes me a significant amount of time to print a set of each
document out, colate them together and prepare them for distribution on a
regular schedule.
I seem to remember Office having an app to relate common files together (I
think it was "Binder" that came with Office 2000, but can't find any
corresponding functionality in Office 2007. I also unfortunately do not have
Adobe Acrobat to generate a combined PDF file.
Can anyone offer some alternatives - this seems like a fairly regular thing
I would think many office users would run into, and I'm surprised there's no
obvious way to achieve this given the sophistication of Office 2007.
Any help is greatly appreciated (for both questions!)
Cheers,
Ted
productivity issue I've been running into. I rprinted this in an earlier
post, but it seems to have disappeared on my despite my searches and
bookmarks to microsoft communities. Does anyone know a quick way to find all
my posts?
2 times a week, I have to generate a single report comprised of the
following seperate documents:
1 word doc
2 excel spreadsheets
1 outlook calendar (weekly view)
1 MS project document.
It currently takes me a significant amount of time to print a set of each
document out, colate them together and prepare them for distribution on a
regular schedule.
I seem to remember Office having an app to relate common files together (I
think it was "Binder" that came with Office 2000, but can't find any
corresponding functionality in Office 2007. I also unfortunately do not have
Adobe Acrobat to generate a combined PDF file.
Can anyone offer some alternatives - this seems like a fairly regular thing
I would think many office users would run into, and I'm surprised there's no
obvious way to achieve this given the sophistication of Office 2007.
Any help is greatly appreciated (for both questions!)
Cheers,
Ted