How to use the Mail Merge feature in Microsoft Word to make form letters, labels, and envelopes.

Did you ever need to send a personalized letter to a list of people? Did you ever need to make mailing labels to those same people, or maybe just labels that have your own information on them? To these tasks manually is a very time-consuming task. But when you use the Mail Merge in Microsoft Word, you will save a lot of time by automating these tasks.
Topics include: Making a sheet of the same label Making Envelopes Using Excel data in the Mail Merge Using Text/CSV data in the Mail Merge Using Access data in the Mail Merge Using Outlook data in the Mail Merge Editing the Recipient List Finishing the Form Letter Creating Envelopes with different addresses Creating Mailing Labels with different addresses Starting the Mail Merge from Microsoft Outlook Creating Dynamic Fields in the Mail Merge

Microsoft Certified Trainer with over 25 Years of Training Experience, and over 40 years in IT overall
Tom Fragale is a computer professional with over 40 years of professional experience. He is a Microsoft Certified Trainer, a Microsoft Certified Office Master, and a Microsoft Certified Expert in Word and Excel, and a Microsoft Certified Specialist in Access, Outlook, and PowerPoint. He has trained over 50,000 business people in online webinars, public seminars, and on-site training. His clients include many Fortune 500 companies, government agencies, military bases, and companies large and small across many industries, including insurance, manufacturing, banking, pharmaceutical, education, retail, etc. He started his career as a database application programmer and has served as a consultant on many successful projects. His topics of expertise include: Access, Excel, Word, PowerPoint, Outlook, Copilot, ChatGPT, Crystal Reports, SQL Server, Visio, QuickBooks, and SharePoint, among others. His passion is helping people get the most out of their computers, and he is a published author having written a book on Microsoft Access, and another on Excel Pivot Tables. He graduated in 1988 from LaSalle University in Philadelphia, PA with a B.A. in Computer Science.
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