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Topics: Cool Web Tools, Helpful Hints, Tech Tips

A New Outlook…Or Maybe Not So Much

Original Article by Jon Griffith - Comments 

2009 has been a long year. It has also been the most prosperous year I’ve ever experienced. It has been a year of shifting perspectives, innovative tools, unexpected hardships, and unexpected blessings. It’s a year that I’ve spent re-acquainting myself with me in order to move forward with a new outlook on life and how I live it.

It’s funny that I should say that I have a new outlook on life because this article is precisely about how I’ve eliminated one outlook that I couldn’t seem to work around. And when I say outlook, I literally mean Outlook…Microsoft Outlook.

For years I’ve used Outlook as my primary communication tool. Calendars, Contacts, Tasks, Notes, and E-mail all contained in one convenient location. For years I’ve cursed at my computer time and time again when what I believed to be the necessary evil (Outlook) would fail to open, crash, slow my system down, you name it. The only reason I stayed with it so long was because of Exchange Server. The two together make for a seamless integration of all of your devices, keeping all of your data in one location accessible anywhere.

Trapped in the confines of Microsoft’s infrastructure has been the only option until recently. And by recently, I mean within the past year or so. You see, the functionality offered by Outlook and Microsoft Exchange is not exclusive to Outlook and Exchange. It is a concept; an idea that all of your information should be in one location and you should not have to do things more than once, and that duplicate information is inefficient.

The problem has been that the only tools available require spending more money than any of us want to spend on these things. How much does a day-planner need to cost? That has changed.

I credit this personal shift to a conversation I recently had between Loren Kutsko, Director of Strategy and Information Management at Food for the Hungry, and Mark Kaech, Grassroots Campaigns and Special Projects, also at Food for the Hungry. It’s inevitable that when you put us together, we’ll talk about the latest tools and happenings in the technology world. When I expressed my apprehension about making some major shifts in how I manage my information, which ultimately translates into a more seamless transaction in the real estate contract process, I was met with the reality that I was still doing things the “Gen-X” way, and not the “Gen-Y” way and that the tools that I need are available at a fraction of the cost.

As someone who considers himself open to change, to be struck with the possibility that I’m not standing at the front of the technology-progress boat anymore caused me to reassess my ways.

The Challenge

I’ll keep this simple. I want my contacts on my iPhone to be identical to my contacts on my computer. When I read a message in my inbox and it’s marked unread, I want it to be universally marked unread so I never have to read it again unless I need to re-visit the message. I want my calendar on my phone to have the same information as my computer, and the same information as my online calendar at Google.

I want complete and seamless synchronization of all of my data so I can get to it anywhere, anytime.

The Old Solution

Microsoft Exchange Server in concert with Mobile ActiveSync, Outlook, and Outlook Web Access. If not self hosted at my own facility with over $6000 worth of hardware and software required, at the very least, paid for on a single-user basis at an exchange hosting company for about $10.00/month.

The New Way

This is so simple it amazes me that I didn’t think of it before. A note of caution. If you aren’t willing to rethink how you manage your information, almost completely, you’ll be very frustrated if you try to do this.  In fact, you may not be able to do this. There are also some pre-requisites that are assumed prior to making this type of change.

  • You need your own domain name.  Lose the gmail extension, the yahoo account, the free e-mail identity.  Get your own domain name and start branding yourself personally so you never have to change it.  If your company gives you an e-mail address, use it for company communication only, and get your own identity.  you@yourname.com is far more valuable than you123@yoohoo.lame.com.
  • You need a smart phone, and preferably, an iPhone.  More tools will emerge at lower and lower costs, but this is where I am today.
  • I matters not whether you have a MAC or a PC anymore.  Entourage and Outlook are no longer needed.
  • Please use either Firefox or Chrome as your primary internet browser.  Internet Explorer should only be used if the idiots on the other end of the website you need to use have failed to develop a more compatible site and it requires Internet Explorer to work.  Safari will suffice, but I personally avoid it.  Firefox is my first choice for now.

So What are the Changes I Actually Made?

I moved all of my data from Exchange to Google.  I moved my calendar to Google Calendars, my contacts to Google, and all of my e-mail to Google.  My notes are kept nice and neat using Evernote, my tasks…well, I never used tasks because we still need a good system that supports task dependencies and hierarchical action plans.  My website resides at another hosting provider, but all of the e-mail traffic is bounced to Google and handled by Google in a very easy to use Gmail interface.  No, I do not have a @gmail.com address.

How did I do this?  Well, it didn’t happen overnight.  I have lots of information that needed to be moved, and I’m still sorting out a few things here and there.  My website never went down, but my e-mail was interrupted for a few hours, so if you do this, you should make it a late night event.

All of these steps were accomplished in phases to ensure it was going to work, but there were some leaps of faith involved.  I made sure to get into the forums on Google to search for potential problems, then I dove in.

Before you do anything, backup all of your Outlook data.

Step 1: Establish Google Apps account for my domain.  (assumes you have a domain name already: www.godaddy.com to solve this problem.)

This is so easy.  Go to www.google.com/apps and sign up for Google Apps for Business.  It’s $50.00/year per user.  Go for the free 30 day trial (you can click here for that).

Step 2: Using the MX settings that Google gives you after you’ve setup your account, go to your domain manager at Godaddy.com or wherever you registered your domain, and modify the MX records.  Don’t screw it up and record the settings that were already there.  If you need to call someone there, do so.  They’ll help you do it.

Step 3: Watch the mail start rolling in.  It takes about 2 hours or so to kick in.

Step 4: Setup a new e-mail account on your iPhone using the gmail settings.  Now you have completely synchronized e-mail on your phone and through your gmail interface.

Step 5: Export all of your calendar data from Outlook or Entourage, or from wherever you keep it.

Step 6: Import your calendar from within your new Google account.

Step 7: Export all of your contacts from whatever program you’re using.

Step 8: Import your contacts into Google.

Step 9: Setup a new mail account using the Exchange option on your iPhone.  Follow these simple instructions to do so. Since you have already setup a mail account on your phone, make sure that your iPhone is set to sync only Calendar and Contact items, not mail.  The iPhone only allows one exchange configuration, so having a recent backup is going to make your life much easier at this point because you can delete your current exchange setup (if you have one) without losing your data.

Step 10: This is the last step.  Login to your Google Apps account (http://www.google.com/a/yourdomain.com), click the Service Settings tool bar item and then Mobile at the bottom of the drop-down menu.  Make sure you enable Google Sync at the bottom.

That’s it.  Your e-mail will be delivered to Google, you’ll be able to use the Gmail interface to manage it, and you’ll have it on your mobile device on demand.  Your calendar and contacts will begin to fill up in your phone, seemingly magically, and everything will be synchronized.

Mashable.com recently published these findings regarding Gmail vs. Outlook. I stand with Google now.

Oh, and the very very last step.  Uninstall Outlook :) .

If you need some help walking through this process feel free to contact me and I can help you through.

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  • Jon, that's interesting because I just started using Outlook last year and love it! :)

    Maybe it's a baby boomer thing but I had a real bad attitude about everything Microsoft so I sure wasn't going to use Outlook in my younger days. Remember when Outlook viruses would bring down the entire internet about twice a year?

    I find I'm tons more organized using Outlook. I use Tasks a lot. I love the way I can customize the way my email is displayed. I love dragging an email onto the Calendar (or Task bar) to make an Appointment (or Task) with the email attached so I can easily see what the heck the Appointment is all about. I love the purchased add-on "Template Phrases for Outlook" where I hold all my standard email responses (pure gold). I find Notes useful.

    Last year, after using Pocomail for years, I tried Thunderbird and then Gmail and then finally Outlook and I found Outlook to be far better for me personally.

    Gmail's user interface always felt disorganized to me. I missed having email folders. I like having one folder for each client.

    The only thing I miss about Pocomail, or Thunderbird or Gmail is that in Pocomail it was easy to find the outgoing reply to any incoming email because the original incoming email had links on it to all the outgoing replies. Haven't figured out how to find that in Outlook.

    Of course, this is only my personal preference. I certainly don't mind the $9 per month. I waste tons of money elsewhere in my budget.

    One downside to Outlook was that it took me a few months to learn how to use it well but I'm over the hump. It became my primary email client last spring but it wasn't until September that I became a big fan.

    It's cool that you struck upon a system that works so well for you. But for old farts like me, Outlook might be a good option to consider. :)
  • I hear ya. After 2 years of IT management at a real estate brokerage, and a biased "outlook" on Outlook, it's a big shift. I trained 300+ agents to grasp the mindset of Outlook, but now I wish I hadn't.

    Over the next few years, you will see a shift from front end applications to web-based applications. We are returning to a quasi-thin-client, mainframe networking architecture where all of your applications will be hosted on a server in cyberspace and you won't need to pay for individual licenses any more.

    Regarding the disorganization of Gmail, it takes a bit of time to adapt what I did in Outlook to Gmail. Folders don't exist, but labels do, which are more versatile, because one message can be tagged with two labels, and you can drag your messages to the labels just like you can folders. You would have to make a copy of a message in Outlook to achieve the same result, and that takes up space. Gmail gives you 25GB of storage. Most providers throttle exchange to 200MB per user.

    Outlook is a great program, but I think the limitations and cost to entry is too high, and I'm sure that webmail, which I've fought against for 10 years, is going to evolve into as robust, and even more versatile than Outlook. But for now, if you're producing, and the message is being sent and received, then the job is getting done.
  • Well, I know that there are other smart-phones that can do some of these things, but you'll have to do a little homework. I happen to only know the iPhone, and I probably won't go back, unless something equal or better in terms of functionality and ease of use comes out.
  • I don't have an iphone, but this sounds like it would be really useful for people who did have an iphone. I am amazed at what we can get phones to do these days. I'm still using my first-ever phone (an old Nokia) and until it completely collapses I don' t plan to upgrade.
  • That's good to know. I signed up for the free trial, but maybe I'll need to look into whether or not they are supposed to charge me. Either way, at only a little more than $4.00 per month, it's 60% cheaper than the alternative.
  • Apps for domains should be free for entities with less than 50 employees, I believe. At least, we're not paying anything for it. :)
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