In Outlook 97, Outlook 98, and Outlook 2000, you can store frequently used addresses in a PAB. You can also store contact information in the form of contact items in the Contacts folder. A contact form permits you to store more detailed information than a PAB entry can store. You can also create multiple contact folders and use them to store appropriate contact information. For example, you can create a contact folder called "Friends," and create contact items about close friends in that folder.
After you create these secondary contact folders, you can make them available as an e-mail Address Book. To do this:
1. | Right-click the contact folder that you want to make available as an e-mail Address Book. |
2. | Click Properties. |
3. | Click the Outlook Address Book tab. |
4. | Click to select the Show this folder as an e-mail Address Book check box. |
In versions earlier than Outlook 2000, when you click
Services on the
Tools menu, and then click
Addressing, the
Keep personal addresses in list can contain only the PAB, even though you may have configured one or more contact folders to be available as e-mail Address Books.
In Outlook 2000, however, all of the contact folders that you configure to be available as e-mail Address Books are listed in the
Keep personal addresses in list. You can then decide which of these contact folders that you want to be the destination of any new addresses that you create.
NOTE: This destination for new addresses applies only to new addresses that you create by clicking
Address Book on the
Tools menu, or by pressing Ctrl+Shift+B. It does not apply to addresses that you add by right-clicking an address in a received e-mail message. If you right-click an e-mail address in an e-mail message and click
Add to Contacts, that e-mail address is always added to the default Contacts folder, regardless of the new addresses destination setting.