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Hank Leukart on Color Categories

The following is from guest blogger and fellow PM, Hank Leukart. Enjoy!

-Melissa

Greetings!  My name is Hank Leukart, and I am a Program Manager for Microsoft Office Outlook.  I have worked on Outlook 2001 for Mac, Outlook 2002 (XP), Outlook 2003, and Outlook 12; I’ve been involved in designing – among other features – Search Folders, the Mail Views, the Navigation Pane (originally called The Wunderbar), date-based For Follow Up flags, the To-Do Bar, The Daily Task List, the new Calendar’s visual look, and Calendar Overlay.  Today, I’ll talk about the new Color Categories feature and how it improves information and time management in Outlook 12.  Then, I’ll brace myself for your feedback to learn how much you love or hate me (or more importantly, this feature).

During the time I have worked on Outlook, I have heard reams of customer feedback.  I usually keep an Outlook Note (am I the only one who uses these?) containing feedback and feature requests to which I refer back when I’m thinking up new features. When I set out to design the Color Categories feature for Outlook 12, I found some of these nuggets in that little yellow Note:

  1. “I wish I could label my flag colors!”
  2. “Six For Follow Up flag colors is not enough.”
  3. “I wish I could assign multiple flags or labels to an item.”
  4. “I love coloring my Calendar!”
  5. “I like to group Mail and Tasks by project.”
  6. “When I want to label or file an item, it’s hard for me to decide whether I should use a Folder, a Category, a For Follow Up flag, or a Calendar Label.” 

In my experience, software companies (including Microsoft) are good at adding great features to their products but not always as good at reconciling how new features work with existing features, sometimes resulting in a confusing mess.  We usually do this for the right reasons – we don’t want to make anyone unhappy by removing or changing existing features they’ve come to love – but often the outcome is not optimal.

Outlook Categories are a great example of this.  First, Outlook 97 had Categories and Folders, two features unrelated to each other.  Most people used Folders for Mail but Categories for Contacts and Tasks.  Then, customers wanted to be able to color their calendars, so we added Calendar Labels, a feature totally unrelated to Categories.  Then, customers wanted to be able to follow up on their mail with multicolored flags, so we added that feature – also unrelated to Categories.  Including Automatic Formatting and Note colors, Outlook 2003 gave customers six different ways to label or color an item.

Thus, for Outlook 12, my mantra was, “Simplify, simplify, simplify.”  I imagined a world in which one feature could be used to label and color items of any type.  That feature became Color Categories.

In concept, Color Categories are simple.  With one or two clicks, you can add a color and text label to any item in Outlook.  For me, my categories usually relate to projects upon which I am working.  Thus, my Inbox workflow tends to work like this: 1) flag an incoming message with a date, 2) right-click on the message’s category column to assign a category that corresponds to a related project, and 3) arrange my To-Do Bar by Due Date when I want to focus on due dates or by Category when I want to focus on projects.  I also categorize appointments with the same categories, based on which project a meeting is about.  The same goes for Contacts; the people with whom I work on certain projects are categorized with the corresponding project categories.  I even categorize my Notes by project. (I know, I’m the only one.)


Right click on category column to categorize an item

Some people I know prefer to use Color Categories exclusively as a way to mark items for later review.  They tend to use the “Categorized Mail” folder to see all of their categorized items.  Others use categories both to mark items for review and also to associate them with projects, which is possible because more than one Color Category can be assigned to an item.

Once you have categorized items, you can also search by Color Category in any module by typing the category name in the Instant Search pane.  For example, you can type “Personal” or “category:(Carson Project)” to search for items to which those categories are assigned.  If you’re feeling especially motivated, you can create a Search Folder for mail messages with a specific category by clicking File/New/Search Folder, selecting “Create a custom Search Folder,” then specifying the category as part of the Search Folder’s criteria.  We’re hoping to make this process easier for Beta 2.


Search within a category with search syntax

Because I also have been involved in many of Outlook 12’s visual changes, some of my fellow Program Managers have joked that I am the “pretty colors PM.”  Maybe for Outlook 14, it’ll be shapes.

Tip #1 for advanced users: you can assign a Shortcut Key to any category for easy assignment of your most-used categories.  I use Ctrl+F12 any time I want to use my “Important” category.

Tip #2 for advanced users: if you right-click on an item’s Categories column and click “Set Quick Click…,” you can select a category that will be instantly assigned to any item when single-clicking on the category column.

Published Friday, February 17, 2006 3:22 PM by mmacbeth
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Comments

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I really, really like the new color / categories features, and the to-do bar blows me away. I'm addicted to getting things done now.

I feel like Outlook has really come around this version, and I can't wait to get it on desktops of people in my office.

The only suggestion I have is this: Allow me to dock the To-Do bar to my desktop, rather than just having it in Outlook. It would be great if I could have it docked to the right side of my screen (maybe minimized), so that I can mouse-over and quickly add a task, see what I still have to do for the day, and see the upcoming events on my calendar.

I believe it was Jensen Harris's blog (it may have been this one) where he said MS found that many users were just double clicking on the system clock to check calendar days, and that totally describes me. However, even with the To-Do bar in Outlook, it still takes me a click (or an alt-tab) to quickly look at a calendar.

Put a calendar, my task list, and upcoming events right in front of my face! Before the Outlook To-Do bar, I would keep a paper list on my desk, because I could quickly see what I had to do. I liked it, because my task list was always in the corner of my eye nagging me. It would be great to attach it to my desktop, instead of "hidden" in Outlook.

By the way - I also use notes. It's the best way I've found to keep track password, books I want to read, etc.
Friday, February 17, 2006 8:51 PM by Andrew Dunn

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

Howdy Hank,

As the appointed representative for all folks who are color-blind - I hope that in O12 we can have a "color-blind" friendly palette.  This may not make the Office design team happy, but it sure would make the feature more valuable to about 12% of the male population.

When I look at the palette above certain colors (for "Career" and "Smith Project") are virtually imposible to differentiate.  Maybe they are the same?

Would love to hear from you (Rainer and Osama have my current e-mail address.)

Cheers!

Don
Friday, February 17, 2006 9:12 PM by Don Mace

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I second Andrew's request. I think I blogged about that previously already: It seems the to-do bar and the upcoming sidebar in Vista serve the same purpose. I think actually that the ideal solution would be to have individual gadgets for the windows sidebar that correspond to the stuff in outlook's to do bar.
Saturday, February 18, 2006 7:15 AM by davidacoder

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

Hi Hank,

Thanks for a great post, I am not using Beta 1, but I am assuming that I cannot sort in one place all contacts, calendar items, notes, and tasks, based on a category. For example category Project A.

Thus it is weird I have all these different options of putting categories on stuff but I cannot view them all together.  
Saturday, February 18, 2006 10:56 AM by Johann Sigurdsson

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I agree with the idea of locking the bar to the desktop - I'm trying to use 3rd party software to achieve this and it would be much better as part of the system
Sunday, February 19, 2006 9:14 AM by Peter Blair

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I'd like to second Andrew, David, Johann and Peter. Please make the To-Do list available on the Windows Vista sidebar, so that it's always visible. This would be the top one feature of the upcoming Outlook 2007.
Sunday, February 19, 2006 3:40 PM by Mantvydas

# To-Do Bar on Desktop!

One more for the To-Do bar right on the Desktop! There could be a keyboard key assigned system wide, so when you press it, you get the To-Do Bar on top of any other windows you're working on!  Keep up with the amazing work you're doing redesigning Office, specially Outlook. At last, a true PRODUCTIVITY application, for personal life and/or work.
Monday, February 20, 2006 12:36 AM by Carlos Bohórquez

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

Thanks for all of your comments about the To-Do Bar and the Vista Desktop. We're working on it! :)

-Melissa
Monday, February 20, 2006 11:26 AM by mmacbeth

# Color Categories are nice but need more structure

Okay...  I'll have to be the one to disagree.  I'm not sure I like how the categories work in Outlook 12.  Yes, I like that the colors are there, and I already use them that way in the current version using categories and formatting rules.  

Still, if you read Hank's post carefully, categories are still a mish-mash hodge-podge "feature" that doesn't meet the full set of needs that he's described.  Hank described using categories for status (Important) and for projects -- neither of which to me is a "category".  

A category gives a connotation that describes a high-level group of related items -- something permanent, not temporary (like a project).  I use categories like "Personal" or "Work" on my calendar for recurring/routine appointments.  For tasks and contacts I use categories like "Family" or "Finance" or "Health".  

I can't imagine creating a category for all of my work projects -- some last a week or two, and others last a year and a half.  But once they're a category, then what?  And now with the colors, we're limited in practice to how many categories we can use.  Now, if planned carefully, we could use the same color for related categories -- but they don't sort together, so I then I would have an unsorted jumble of categories.  

I actually do make a lot of use of categories, but even pretty colors won't make up for the fact that we need more structure to go with the categories, and we need a "real" project object in Outlook.  

And, since you mention it in this post, I would use notes more if I could create my own list of note types (phone call, etc) and attach icons to them.  And I want to be able to customize fields for the different types of notes.  For example, if I want to use notes to track my weight, then I want a "Weight" note type, and an actual "Weight" text box.

Status and priorities are the same -- I don't want to use A1, A2, A3, B1, B2, B3, etc. for priorities -- I want to use Critical, Very Important, Important, etc.

Anyway, (...I digress...) I miss having categories next to the Contacts.  I assign them both right after each other, and it's weird to have them in such different places.  For a while I actually thought they had been removed from the product because I didn't know where they went to.

Hank and Melissa, I love Outlook (the new calendar is fantastic, I really like the subscription overlays).  Still, I hope you can see that for users like me who are trying to make full use of the prject -- using Categories (and tasks) the way you described is still a kluge fix for things that are missing (such as a Project object).  And no matter how many workarounds "work", users will always know it's more pretty than it is functional.  

I'm a big fan -- keep up the Outlook improvements and keep blogging!
Monday, February 20, 2006 10:50 PM by Tried the new categories, still hoping for more

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

 I heavily use catagories for tasks, but rarely for mail messages -- folders seem to take the place of that in the way I work (I have 100's of folders).

 How do you guys see folders and catagories interacting?
Tuesday, February 21, 2006 1:58 AM by Gordon Watts

# Notes ... am I the only one who uses these

A little off topic, but I couldn't resist:
"I usually keep an Outlook Note (am I the only one who uses these?)"

Yes, because they are really sad.  If Notes was more like an outliner like TreePad people would use them. Making Notes useful and the ability to create sub-tasks are really key features that I'm amazed aren't in Outlook 2007.
Wednesday, February 22, 2006 12:26 AM by Timlink

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

wow, i just found this blog after doing a sercrh for 'view tasks in email folder' on google and the new to-do bar is gonna do exactly that!!! can't wait to use it.

Max.
Thursday, February 23, 2006 1:43 PM by Max

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

Firstly, I agree with the gent on categories needing more structure and the comment about notes needing an outliner. I still use Ecco from 94 only because of it's outline and folder structure giving me complete flexibility and control at the same time. I understand that in the mid-nineties MS was looking to buy it from Netmanage to integrate or build outlook partly from it. Didn't happen. Ecco died. I'm sad.
Friday, February 24, 2006 11:05 PM by Bryan

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

For those of us that use GTD and syncronize with a Palm, this is a dead feature set. There are a large number of outlook users that use Categories for Context.  I realize Microsoft would prefer we use a pocket pc device, but you can pry my palm from my cold dead hand...

Regardless it's clear that rather than provide the functionality that you're customers are asking for you've determined that you'll cram everything into the Category feature.  In the above post you've set up categories for: Importance, Priority, Due Date, Project, and Category.  As I've noted many of us use it for Context (GTD), and the reality is it functions more as a set of Keywords than anything else (at least in the current version of outlook).  

By doing this you force us as users to hack the system to get the functionality we want.  
That's unfortunate.  

This is another pretty feature that adds no real functionality.  

In a way I really dread the next version of outlook.  I've hacked the current version with add-ins and my own tweaking with custom fields just so that I can reasonably track my workload and activity around focus areas, context, and projects.  I'm sure I'll have to rework my hacks and wait for Add-ins to be updated before the next version of Outlook will be useful again.  



Sunday, February 26, 2006 10:47 AM by John

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I'm using Color Categories with my GTD process quite nicely. I only assign colors to my GTD contexts and use clear categories for my regular categories.

What I really wish I could do, is create some rules that automatically assign categories to messages and tasks based upon the categories I've manually assigned to contacts that are related.

For instance, when I get an email from someone in my address book to which I've assigned the "Colleague" category, I'd like my incoming mail rule to see that category on the Sender and automatically apply it to the message coming in. That would drastically reduce the number of emails I have to process at each sitting, because I can ignore certain categories of email when I'm at work, and others when I'm at home.

Also, it's nice that you've increased the number of colors, but why do you still have such a small number of colors? Why can't we assign any color we want from a standard color picker? I'd like to be able to have lots of shades of the same color, so I can group related categories by similar colors.

For example, let's say an item has been assigned these three categories:
* @Any Computer
* Work - Acme Corporation
* Expense Reports

It's not as important to me that I memorize the color assignments as much as being able to glance at my calendar or task list and see that a particular item has been assigned to these three different categories; one of which is my GTD context (probably in a distinctive color) and the other two are both work related, so they might be different shades of a similar color.

The real power of colors is not precision, but the information you can get at a glance.
Monday, March 20, 2006 12:35 AM by Ken

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

>> Outlook Note (am I the only one who uses these?)

No you are not the only one, have you guys ever considered linking these to a Sharepoint list (Announcements, or bLog?)

Ed
Friday, March 24, 2006 11:44 PM by Ed Richard

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I agree with all six comments from Hank's yellow note.  I can't wait to see this feature implemented!!!
Wednesday, March 29, 2006 12:40 PM by Matt

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

It's probably too late for the Office 2007, but it'd be really nice to see a feature that would learn to pre-select a quick click category or move-to folder based on keywords in the email and the sender.  I know I have a number of folders, such as for personal correspondence, where new items almost always go into the same folder if they're from one person, for example.  Having outlook "learn" this would be an amazing feature, and even better if it could synchronize this data with Exchange.
Wednesday, May 24, 2006 12:28 AM by Anand

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I think ClearContext will do just this.
Wednesday, May 24, 2006 7:43 PM by Tim

# Outlook 2007 simplified categories too much

Hi Hank,

I'll show you the way the Outlook is used by me (and many of my co-workers too) and you shall see the negative impact Outlook 2007 is inroducing to our well-organized way of working with categories.

My primary view in my e-mail folder is Category view grouped by categories. So in my Inbox I see first uncategorized messages (all that are coming as new messages) and then are groups of already categorized e-mails.

I use in-cell editing so I can give category to any e-mail directly editing the text of category without opening the e-mail (I see it in Preview).

The key for Category name for specific e-mail may be:
- Project name (usually Company name and Project name ie. Microsoft Cobra, PTK IBSMS etc.)
- General category (ie. Conferences, Marketing, WWW, Sales, Shopping, Mailings etc.)
- Company name (ie. Doubletake, VMware etc.)

Additionally I differentiate internal communication from external/customer communication by adding special character to the category name, ie:
- Communication with the customer in project - category: Microsoft Cobra
- Communication with my co-workers in the same project - category: _Microsoft Cobra

Such way of filling the categories enables me to quickly go for specific project/theme (and I have hundreds of them) regardles of who sent ma an e-mail. Additionally despite having many messages in my inbox I still see not-yet-categorized messages on top of my inbox (basically messages need taking care of).

Previously I used folders for categorization of messages but it proved to be non-efficient way. Flagged messages moved to folders was not easily accessible (I was not able to get them all in single view by changing the view), additionally not moving them to folders fast enough was causing complete mess in my Inbox.

So categories (without limits) proved to be very successful and I could use flags with different colors for easy marking them for future action.

Outlook 2007 (which I'm trying to use for some time) completely destroyed my well-organized "categories world" and I still can't find substitute for this. I also can't understand what led you to changing the categories so much (I really see no reason for such simplification).

Summary of the problem:
1. O2007 does not allow of in-cell editing of Categories so there is no way for quick categorization if you use 100s of categories.
2. Adding of new categories is very difficult - you have to go through separate window. Really makes use of categories harder than before.
3. In my opinion there are always several possible layers of categorization. Combining all the methods available into one does not really solve the problem. It limits the number of ways Outlook could be used to only one scenario suitable for some people (group may be really huge but still from my point of view this is limitation of possibilities - not the extension).

I'm really interested in your opinion.Doyou think it will be possible to have in-cell editing of categiores in final Outlook 2007?
Sunday, May 28, 2006 8:28 AM by Michal Szafranski

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

One thing that is really missing in my view, is the possibility to search categorized items other than mail. I don't understand that you can add categories to tasks and appointments, yet you cannot search them or create a dedicated Search Folder for it. I really would like to see that functionality in OLK2007!
Tuesday, June 06, 2006 6:59 AM by oVan

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

It's great that you've unified how color tagging works across mail and calendar.  However, a few problems:

1. I _really_ miss the colored flags and nice flag backgrounds of Outlook 2003.  In 2003, it is so easy to scan down a flag column and look at the different colors.  Also looks nice and neat.  By contrast, Outlook 2007 requires two columns to do the same thing.  And the category color swatches aren't aligned the same way as the flags.  (Colors are top aligned; flags are center aligned.)  Also, it now takes multiple actions (setting flag plus category) to do what used to take only one action.  Please give me back my colored flags!

2. Category color swatches should not use gradients.  Make them a solid color instead.  Gradient adds needless clutter and cognitive load, makes the category indicator less easy to recognize and distinguish from others.  Solid colors, please.
Wednesday, June 14, 2006 12:28 AM by Phil Russell

# The New Category Structure

I just ran across the Outlook 2007 beta 2 change regarding categories.  I must be missing something but the new schema is definately going in the wrong direction for me.  I fully agree with Michal that this is way too much simplification.  I just brought my Outlook 2003 contacts over (I have probably 75 important categories) and while I can see them, I can't find the process to add or modify my previous structure in the new world. Color may be nice for some applications, but the loss of Outlook 2003 category functionality would keep me from migrating. Maybe I just haven't spent sufficient time with the product, to see how I can get from where I am to where I want to be in Outlook 2007.  

Hank, how would you implement the concepts in Sally McGhee's book from Microsoft Press "Take Back Your Life" regarding the use of Outlook 2003 categories? (pages 100-109)

I just spend a lot of time installing Outlook Connector so categories would work with MSN mail and Outlook 2003. Where is connector headed with Outlook 2007?

John Rummel
Saturday, June 17, 2006 5:15 PM by John R

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

While the Categories feature has been enhanced in Outlook 2003, the feature works mostly the same way it did in 2003.  The data schema for categories is still exactly the same -- it's a comma-delineated text field on items.  You can still have many categories in your Master Category List (by choosing All Categories... and editing the list) and you can still assign many categories to a given item.  I'm not aware of any category functionality loss that has significantly contributed to the people being unable to migrate to Outlook 2007.  If you have specific complaints about something you used to be able to do that you can't anymore, let me know.

Hank Leukart
Outlook Program Manager
Tuesday, June 27, 2006 5:41 PM by Hankle

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I agree with the previous comment about creating rules to auto categorize incoming mail corresponding to the sender's category in my contacts. I am a consultant and have my contacts categorized by the companies where they work. I would like to setup a rule where any e-mail coming from someone I have in the XYZ Company category to also have the XYZ Company category. I can currently create a rule to automatically categorize icoming mail based on the sender, but I have to manually and each sender to the rule. Every time I create a new contact, I have to adjust the rule. A real pain.
Tuesday, August 08, 2006 11:45 AM by Jim

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

One issue I have with the approach taken with category definition is that it is user/application specific.  This is all well and good until you start using Public Folders.  When you have a public folder calendar, and want to use categories on this, you end up with synchronisation issues (i.e. the categories - names, colours, and shortcuts - are defined per user/client).
Monday, August 14, 2006 2:55 AM by Paul Reynolds

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I would prefer to have the ability to set my folders to specific colors.  I already set certain inbound mail to colors to readily identify key senders. I have a large number of pst files and other folders that it would greatly improve my search and sort capability if I could set them to a specific color.

Is this in the future works?
Tuesday, September 26, 2006 11:30 AM by Brad Maunders

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

Brad,

This is definitely something we have thought about, and hopefully we will get to sometime in the future.

Thanks for writing.

-Melissa
Tuesday, September 26, 2006 9:33 PM by mmacbeth

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I am curious, I have a few categories that say (not in master category list) after the catagory, I cant find anything on this comment.  Do you know what it means and if I can edit it or need to worry about it.

Thanks, Marc
Wednesday, September 27, 2006 1:27 PM by Marc Russo

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

In O12, having categories that are "not in the master category list" can happen if you have used interim Beta builds - you shouldn't see this if you have never used a Beta build. Regardless, the situation can be rectified. When you are in the categories dialog (Categorize->All Categories...), select the "not in master category list" category, click "new" and add a color (your choice), and then click ok. The category will be added to the master category list.

-Melissa
Wednesday, September 27, 2006 1:34 PM by mmacbeth

# Project Server Tasks in Outlook: Part 2

The following is the second in a series of two posts from Jon Kaufthal, a program manager from the Project

Monday, October 16, 2006 2:14 PM by Tasks and Time Management in Outlook

# Dear Hank Leukart, I need some help

Hi,

I'm Karla from Mexico, I'd like to know if there's any way to get able flags from a first message.

I mean, can I select the flag color I want to use to the message I'm creating before send it?. I can select color only when I reaply a marked message, but I wanna send the first message with a flag wich I selected. Any idea?.

Maybe there's a macro to do tis. I wish you can help me.

Thank very much for reading this comment. And, I'm so sorry about my English, I know it's not good enought, I hope you can undesrtand it :)

Greetings!,

Karla Renteria (karla_grq@hotmail.com)

Tuesday, December 26, 2006 12:14 PM by Karla Renteria

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

Carla,

Unfortunately, there is no way to set the color category when sending. You can however, set the flag on send.

I hope this helps.

-Melissa

Thursday, December 28, 2006 6:32 PM by Melissa MacBeth

# Outlook 2003 not showing Outlook 2007 categories!

Guys,

Our organisation uses O 2007 and O 2003. One department uses the categories and flags A LOT, but all of a sudden the new O 2007 categories cant be seen by the others still using O 2003!!!!! Did you forget to think about that very important backward compatibility feature>??????

Wednesday, January 24, 2007 5:48 PM by Rykie

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

Rykie,

Actually, we use the same field in Outlook 2007 (categories) as we do in Outlook 2003, so it should work. The people who are using Outlook 2003 need to add the category column to their view (and in earlier versions.) The colors, however, are Outlook 2007 only.

-Melissa

Wednesday, January 24, 2007 8:47 PM by mmacbeth

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

In Outlook 2003 I color coded my "recurring" appointments (daily, weekly, monthly) using labels. When I completed an appointment, I simply changed the color to RED. By week's end, my calendar was basically RED all over.

After converting to Outlook 2007, I discovered that I cannot change the label (now category) for a single occurrence of recurring appointments. I can only change categories for the entire series.

Is there a way around this?

Friday, March 09, 2007 6:26 PM by Andy Capron, Chicago IL

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

How do I get all the catagories from my Outlook 2003 into 2007. I keep my data local & had no problem importing the pst file for all the old emails, appointents etc,. But the catagory list just shows the basic included items.

Thanks

Monday, March 19, 2007 4:37 PM by Grant Watkins

# Outlook 2007 simplified categories too much

You are absolutely right.  I use categories to identify mails just like you do.  that said, all history.  I used to be able to send mails categorized and got replies back categorized.  Not anymore, that has been dropped as people felt the categories I assigned where not theirs.  which now means that I have to assign categories not only on mails I receive, no, also on replies I send and again on any mail I receive.  to make matters worse, I cannot even type my categories into the category field but I have to select them time and again.  You just destroyed my way of working completely.

In general, I love 2007 Office but this is a major issue for me, please turn it back on.....

Jay

Monday, March 26, 2007 2:50 AM by Jay J Keller

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

Ditto this one!!

In Outlook 2003 I color coded my "recurring" appointments (daily, weekly, monthly) using labels. When I completed an appointment, I simply changed the color to RED. By week's end, my calendar was basically RED all over.

After converting to Outlook 2007, I discovered that I cannot change the label (now category) for a single occurrence of recurring appointments. I can only change categories for the entire series.

Is there a way around this?

In Outlook 2003 I color coded my "recurring" appointments (daily, weekly, monthly) using labels. When I completed an appointment, I simply changed the color to RED. By week's end, my calendar was basically RED all over.

After converting to Outlook 2007, I discovered that I cannot change the label (now category) for a single occurrence of recurring appointments. I can only change categories for the entire series.

Is there a way around this?

Monday, April 09, 2007 5:12 PM by Ron

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I had the misfortune of "upgrading" from Outlook 2003 to 2007 today.  I am in awe of the stupidity involved in the changes to flags and categories.  If you would have just added the color feature to the categories, you would have had an improvement.  If you would have also added customizable labels to the existing multi-color flags, you would have scored a home-run.

What did you do instead?  You completely ruined both the category and the flag features of Outlook 2003!  For years, I’ve been using the category feature to classify every email that I send or receive.  Each email also gets a priority flag (red, blue, yellow, etc.)  The “upgrade” today changed thousands of my carefully categorized and flagged emails so that they all had the same red flag and changed all my categories to “Color Red”, “Color Blue”, etc.  How could this possibly be interpreted as an improvement?!?  Now, instead of a priority flag with an easily distinguishable color, I have a choice of… well, let’s see…. red, lighter red, lighter red, lighter red, red or red.  

Were you completely stoned when made this decision?  And it just gets better.   I can’t assign a category to an outgoing email?  Why the heck not?  For the love of Mike, at the VERY least release a patch that puts colors back on to the flags instead of six shades of red.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007 11:04 PM by GlenH

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I realize this is an old thread, however, I have upgraded form OL 2003 to 2007 and am stumped.  I had about a dozen text categories (personal, vendor, advertising, etc.) that i used to organize my contacts.

In list view I see the categories, but in normal contact view there is no field for category and thus no way to enter in a category for a new contact.  

Yea, I can make it "red" or "blue" category but that is useless to me.  I simply want a category field to be displayed in each contact record as it was in 2003.  What was wrong with that feature that it had to be expunged?

Friday, April 20, 2007 6:50 PM by Frank

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I am aware this is an old thread but perhaps as relevant today as it was in 2006. My major gripe is regarding the issue raised in "Outlook 2007 simplified categories too much". My category system is harmonised for computer folders, emails, home inventory, actually everything in my life. The categories branch down several levels. My emails are organised by physical folders, and within the folders I use categories for the topic under discussion. At this level I have more than 100 active categories. In Outlook 2003, the Catgeory masterlist maintained my top level categories and avoided a micro-clutter. Instead of in-cell editing that enabled me to maintain ad-hoc categories, I am now forced to maintain a register of 100 odd master list before I can select one.

Outlook achieved its greatness on back of its flexibility which swept aside many of its competitors into Chapter 11. You are now making the same mistake the failed companies did -- assume that you know precisely what customers want. Please go back to your heritage -- give the customers choice, let them decide how best to micro-structure the program around their needs.

Monday, May 14, 2007 2:19 PM by D Patra

# Outlook 2007 simplified categories too much

I am aware this is an old thread but perhaps as relevant today as it was in 2006. My major gripe is regarding the issue raised in "Outlook 2007 simplified categories too much". My category system is harmonised for computer folders, emails, home inventory, actually everything in my life. The category level branches down several levels. My emails are organised by folders, and within the folders I use categories for tthe topic under discussion. At this level I have more than 100 active categories. In Outlook 2003, the Catgeory masterlist maintained my top level categories and avoided a micro-clutter. Instead of in-cell editing that enabled me to maintain ad-hoc categories, I am now forced to maintain a register of 100 odd master list.

Outlook achieved its greatness on back of its flexibility which swept aside many of its competitors into Chapter 11. You are now making the same mistake the failed companies did -- assume that you know precisely what customers want. Please go back to your heritage -- give the customers choices, let them decide how best to micro-structure the program around their needs.

Monday, May 14, 2007 2:20 PM by D Patra

# What about migrating?

Is there any way to migrate custom categories to other users? I need to continue using this feature as we have been doing in the past (we use a custom tool that edits our registry). I need my coworkers to use the same Master Category List I use.

What can I do?

Tuesday, May 22, 2007 6:48 PM by William

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I need to figure out how to change categories for a single occurance of a recurring appointment. Can someone help?

Wednesday, September 26, 2007 6:30 PM by Jason

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

Any way to turn this off? I just upgraded to outlook 2007 and it is spending hours 'updating fmulticolor flag' - and I don't even use outlook tasks.

Thursday, September 27, 2007 10:52 AM by Brad Jensen

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

HEEELP! I am loosing my mind trying to use color categories via automatic formatting in in the Outlook 2007 Calendar.

They are constantly dissapearing! When we set the color categories in "rules for this view" in automatic formatting we go back after closing the program and they are gone! So we have to go back into automatic formatting and enter them again! What is the simple thing I am missing here?

Sunday, September 30, 2007 12:45 PM by Kevin Easton

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

Is ther any way to make more than 3 appointments show on the calandar...Oultook 2003 showed more than this but I have not found where to change Outlook 2007.

Monday, November 26, 2007 5:27 PM by Karmen Kelley

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I am trying to use automatic formatting in Outlook 2007 Calendar as I was doing in Outlook 2003 Calendar

I have a rule that sets a specific color for an appointment if a specific condition is met (based on subject and category fields of that appointment.

It seems that the color assigned to a category (even if "no color" is selected) have priority over the color that is set by the automatic formatting rule. (for example, if my business category is blue and my rule wants to set the color to red if there is an "ok" in the subject and category is "business", then the color of the appointment will be blue, not red - as in Outlook 2003)

Is there a solution for this or this is the expected behavior of Outlook 2007 Calendar's automatic formatting?

PS: automatic formatting w/o having a category set works as expected

Wednesday, December 19, 2007 10:40 AM by Sebastian Deac

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I just found this thread while searching (in vain) for relief from my new-found Outlook 2007 category colors frustration, and I'm hoping someone at Microsoft is still reading this old thread. From at least a couple of the posts here including the most recent, I see I'm not entirely alone, and I'll add my perspective with hopes that there is enough of us to complain to make changes to the next version of Outlook. I'll focus on just my use of categories and colors specifically.

I tag all of my calendar items with a category. In Outlook 2003, I set up automatic formatting so that calendar items were colored based their categories AND OTHER INFORMATION. Typically I used this to assign colors depending on the combination of category and free/busy flag so that meetings I planned to attend might be shown in yellow but meetings that I marked as free (but still wanted to note in my calendar) might have no color. I could leave these both in my "meetings" category, but if I changed the free/busy flag, the color would change appropriately.

Having just "upgraded" to Outlook 2007, I am dismayed to find that colors are now essentially locked to categories. Even if I set all categories to have no color, I cannot get the auto formatting rules to override the color (or lack thereof) defined by the category. Since my previous rules depend on both category AND the other information, they will not work properly in 2007. This is even more frustrating in that I synchronize my calendar between home and work (which uses Outlook 2003), so that whatever solution I come up with will only really work in one place.

I thought of using a second category to use in place of the free/busy flag or other info, but besides being cumbersome, there is no way to tell Outlook which category to use to determine its color - it just seems to use the most recently added category.

A further frustration with categories, though not related to coloring, is the lack of the "Categories" text field in Outlook forms. Previously, I could easily add new categories not in the master list or quickly type in existing categories without having to open the categories dialog box - I could just type a category into the text field. Now I've got to go through a couple of steps to open the "all categories list" to select the category(s).

As there is nothing I can't live without in 2007, I'm thinking of switching back to 2003 for now. But I would like to see one or more of these changes in future versions of Outlook, or information on how to accomplish these with 2007:

1.  Add a way to turn off the color coding of categories entirely and/or allow auto formatting rules to override the color set by the category.

2.  Add a way to indicate which category, if an item is tagged with multiple ones, should be used to determine the color.

3.  Add back a text field for entering categories in Outlook forms. This could be an option so people that don't need it can turn it off.

While I understand the need for "progress" and simplification as software evolves, you must understand that many of us adapt software such as Outlook to meet our needs and become more productive, even if it isn't perfect. Taking away even imperfect capabilities in the process of making things "better" can frustrate a large number of users when something is as widely used as Outlook is.

P.S. Is there any place to post general requests for new/improved features for Outlook or any other Microsoft product? I would love to put my two cents in on a few topics before you start developing the next version!

Tuesday, January 08, 2008 11:50 PM by Bron Hafner

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

After converting to Outlook 2007, we discovered that we cannot change the label (now category) for a single occurrence of recurring appointments. We can only change categories for the entire series.

Is there a way around this?  This is huge to the functionality of Outlook for our company!

Thursday, January 10, 2008 11:55 AM by Leah

# Automatic CONVERTION of Outlook 2003 my COLORED FLAGS into CATEGORIES COLORS

Hi there!!! Can anyone help?

Being a very recent user of Outlook 2007, and as a Big Fan of FLAG COLORS one of the things I like the most was that Outlook 2007, automatically CONVERTED my colored flags INTO CATEGORIES COLORS the first time I “feed” him one of my daily work PSTs “built” in Outlook 2003.

Having my PST Files stored in a portable 2,5” Drive, I aimed to use PST files back and forth between Outlook 2003 and Outlook 2007, which is hugely important because at the office I have Outlook 2003 and at home Outlook 2007.

The day after my PSTs have been “introduced to Outlook 2007”, and returning to my office PC Outlook 2003, I have noticed a new column “categories” with “spelled colors” (blue, yellow etc..) as well as my old long time buddies  the colored Follow up flags .

Super!! (I thought) I can now carry out my regular day at the office (Outlook 2003) coloring Follow up Flags, as usual, with the confidence (acquired the previous day) that those flags in my precious PTSs when arriving at home to the Outlook 2007, would be (as the first time), automatically CONVERTED INTO CATEGORIES COLORS

WRONG. The flags did not convert to categories color automatically as the first time:S?!. Instead of the standard Outlook 2007 color label, I found, also in the categories column, a color label (slightly different in layout), but one that does not react to sorting… the only solution was to manually assign the according color categories in order to be able to use the categories in those emails witch make absolutely no sense at all.

Probably there is a work around to force Outlook 2007 to do the automatic conversion every time it detects emails “flagged” in Outlook 2003…

Can anyone HELP???

Thanks a lot.

Gonçalo

Tuesday, February 05, 2008 12:23 AM by Gonçalo Gueifão

# Color Categories as Backgrounds

Hey, I just figured that I would throw in my two cents here. I really like the 2007 color categories system, and I'm basically using it to figure out exactly where all of my mail is coming from. Makes it a lot easier to scan through 60-70 email messages and figure out what is/isn't important. The auto-assign category in the rules section is great :)

What I was trying, unsuccessfully, to do, was assign the color category so that it would be the full background of the message in the inbox. Essentially, The entire bar where it displays the date, sender, message title, etc. having the background of the color category, rather than the simple little square. Its quite possible that this feature is there and I just missed it. It'd really help when quickly scanning through the inbox to have a slightly more prominent and noticeable system in place.

Anyhow, thought I'd drop you a line and throw that out there. The more I learn about outlook, the more I enjoy using it.

Thanks!

Jonathan

Friday, March 21, 2008 3:27 PM by Jonathan

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

Hi Jonathan - what you are trying to do is possible via the "autoformatting" feature in Outlook.  While you cannot color the entire row with desired color, you can change the sizes, color and font of the subject/author to indicate anything you want.  For example, mail send directly to you can be colored red and made 2 point sizes larger, etc.  

To access this feature, click on View -> Customize Current View -> Automatic Formatting.  

Enjoy!

Nelson

Outlook Tasks PM

Friday, March 21, 2008 3:35 PM by Nelson Siu (Outlook PM)

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

I completely hate the reorganization of the Tasks functionality in Outlook 2007.

I do not want color categories.  I want my free-text categories back.  I want to type a category in when I am creating a new task.  I certainly do not want to manage a master list of categories.

I absolutely do not want my flagged e-mail messages appearing in my tasks view.  It's not the way I work, and I hate it.

I have been effectively working with prior versions of Outlook with all of their limitations.  You are now trying to completely change the way I work with a half-baked solution that only ends up pissing me off.

If my IT department would let me, I'd go back to Office 2003.

Thursday, March 27, 2008 6:21 PM by Patrick Strader

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

Hank,

I too LOVE the ability to create free-text categories.  I want to type a category in when I am creating a new task and NOT associate it with a color.  In my system of tasks and categories I use to number them which was a way to prioritize.  Now I can't do that.

Please bring back the ability to create free-text categories!

Thanks for your time,

chuck evans

Sunday, March 30, 2008 4:38 PM by Chuck Evans

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

Not sure if this is resolved in Outlook 2007, but I am looking around now for a solution with Office Outlook 2003 to invoke multiple flags. I'm being told it's not possible, yet this is difficult for me to accept because it just seems obvious that sometimes during a work week there might be several specific emails in an inbox that need a flag. I find myself constantly involved with several projects at the same time. Each one gets their own set of emails, as well as the hundreds from the rest of the company.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008 10:20 AM by Andre

# re: Hank Leukart on Color Categories

Oh, never mind! "For Follow Up" seems to do what I want. Now I feel silly....

Wednesday, April 23, 2008 10:28 AM by Andre
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