Creating OFT templates for Outlook from HTML
Is there a stable way of creating an Outlook OFT template, suitable for distributing to users (for them to use), from HTML? We'd like to create an email template for use by a number of people, I'm struggling to figure out how to do this though.
Perhaps the closest I've come is viewing the HTML in IE and choosing Send > Page by email, on a computer with Outlook installed. This opens a new (Outlook) message, which I can save as an OFT file. If I open the OFT file, however, it's plain text.
Is there an alternative way of creating distribute-able Outlook stationery?
Thanks,
Toby
UPDATE One alternative that has occurred to me is distributing the HTML - I'm aware that this can be added to the 'Stationery' folder that Outlook checks in. However, I am trying to find something that is as simple as possible for large numbers of users to setup and an OFT based solution seemed like it would merely require people to double-click the OFT file to create a pre-formatted message.
microsoft-outlook html-mail
|
show 1 more comment
Is there a stable way of creating an Outlook OFT template, suitable for distributing to users (for them to use), from HTML? We'd like to create an email template for use by a number of people, I'm struggling to figure out how to do this though.
Perhaps the closest I've come is viewing the HTML in IE and choosing Send > Page by email, on a computer with Outlook installed. This opens a new (Outlook) message, which I can save as an OFT file. If I open the OFT file, however, it's plain text.
Is there an alternative way of creating distribute-able Outlook stationery?
Thanks,
Toby
UPDATE One alternative that has occurred to me is distributing the HTML - I'm aware that this can be added to the 'Stationery' folder that Outlook checks in. However, I am trying to find something that is as simple as possible for large numbers of users to setup and an OFT based solution seemed like it would merely require people to double-click the OFT file to create a pre-formatted message.
microsoft-outlook html-mail
1
textheavy.com/tutorials/OFT
– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
Oct 1 '14 at 15:13
Thanks - I have already tried that, the result (for me at least) is the same
– toby1kenobi
Oct 1 '14 at 15:17
Can you provide a link to a copy of one of your OFT's you having problems with? Is the problem at hand the fact that they open in plain text? Have you confirmed the user is allowed to send in HTML from Outlook, and that all chosen recipient contacts are set to send in HTML?
– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
Oct 1 '14 at 15:23
The problem is that they open in plain text
– toby1kenobi
Oct 2 '14 at 8:01
@toby1kenobi Was this ever resolved?
– Termato
Dec 17 '14 at 22:31
|
show 1 more comment
Is there a stable way of creating an Outlook OFT template, suitable for distributing to users (for them to use), from HTML? We'd like to create an email template for use by a number of people, I'm struggling to figure out how to do this though.
Perhaps the closest I've come is viewing the HTML in IE and choosing Send > Page by email, on a computer with Outlook installed. This opens a new (Outlook) message, which I can save as an OFT file. If I open the OFT file, however, it's plain text.
Is there an alternative way of creating distribute-able Outlook stationery?
Thanks,
Toby
UPDATE One alternative that has occurred to me is distributing the HTML - I'm aware that this can be added to the 'Stationery' folder that Outlook checks in. However, I am trying to find something that is as simple as possible for large numbers of users to setup and an OFT based solution seemed like it would merely require people to double-click the OFT file to create a pre-formatted message.
microsoft-outlook html-mail
Is there a stable way of creating an Outlook OFT template, suitable for distributing to users (for them to use), from HTML? We'd like to create an email template for use by a number of people, I'm struggling to figure out how to do this though.
Perhaps the closest I've come is viewing the HTML in IE and choosing Send > Page by email, on a computer with Outlook installed. This opens a new (Outlook) message, which I can save as an OFT file. If I open the OFT file, however, it's plain text.
Is there an alternative way of creating distribute-able Outlook stationery?
Thanks,
Toby
UPDATE One alternative that has occurred to me is distributing the HTML - I'm aware that this can be added to the 'Stationery' folder that Outlook checks in. However, I am trying to find something that is as simple as possible for large numbers of users to setup and an OFT based solution seemed like it would merely require people to double-click the OFT file to create a pre-formatted message.
microsoft-outlook html-mail
microsoft-outlook html-mail
edited Oct 1 '14 at 15:20
toby1kenobi
asked Oct 1 '14 at 14:33
toby1kenobitoby1kenobi
166126
166126
1
textheavy.com/tutorials/OFT
– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
Oct 1 '14 at 15:13
Thanks - I have already tried that, the result (for me at least) is the same
– toby1kenobi
Oct 1 '14 at 15:17
Can you provide a link to a copy of one of your OFT's you having problems with? Is the problem at hand the fact that they open in plain text? Have you confirmed the user is allowed to send in HTML from Outlook, and that all chosen recipient contacts are set to send in HTML?
– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
Oct 1 '14 at 15:23
The problem is that they open in plain text
– toby1kenobi
Oct 2 '14 at 8:01
@toby1kenobi Was this ever resolved?
– Termato
Dec 17 '14 at 22:31
|
show 1 more comment
1
textheavy.com/tutorials/OFT
– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
Oct 1 '14 at 15:13
Thanks - I have already tried that, the result (for me at least) is the same
– toby1kenobi
Oct 1 '14 at 15:17
Can you provide a link to a copy of one of your OFT's you having problems with? Is the problem at hand the fact that they open in plain text? Have you confirmed the user is allowed to send in HTML from Outlook, and that all chosen recipient contacts are set to send in HTML?
– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
Oct 1 '14 at 15:23
The problem is that they open in plain text
– toby1kenobi
Oct 2 '14 at 8:01
@toby1kenobi Was this ever resolved?
– Termato
Dec 17 '14 at 22:31
1
1
textheavy.com/tutorials/OFT
– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
Oct 1 '14 at 15:13
textheavy.com/tutorials/OFT
– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
Oct 1 '14 at 15:13
Thanks - I have already tried that, the result (for me at least) is the same
– toby1kenobi
Oct 1 '14 at 15:17
Thanks - I have already tried that, the result (for me at least) is the same
– toby1kenobi
Oct 1 '14 at 15:17
Can you provide a link to a copy of one of your OFT's you having problems with? Is the problem at hand the fact that they open in plain text? Have you confirmed the user is allowed to send in HTML from Outlook, and that all chosen recipient contacts are set to send in HTML?
– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
Oct 1 '14 at 15:23
Can you provide a link to a copy of one of your OFT's you having problems with? Is the problem at hand the fact that they open in plain text? Have you confirmed the user is allowed to send in HTML from Outlook, and that all chosen recipient contacts are set to send in HTML?
– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
Oct 1 '14 at 15:23
The problem is that they open in plain text
– toby1kenobi
Oct 2 '14 at 8:01
The problem is that they open in plain text
– toby1kenobi
Oct 2 '14 at 8:01
@toby1kenobi Was this ever resolved?
– Termato
Dec 17 '14 at 22:31
@toby1kenobi Was this ever resolved?
– Termato
Dec 17 '14 at 22:31
|
show 1 more comment
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Although it's quite old topic it is still valid and I'd like to add step-by-step in Outlook 2016 (most likely works also in Outlook 2013). I struggled to get a proper guide and after multiple trial and error approaches from different sources, got it finally working.
There's couple of tools/solutions out there but they're paid and usually include plenty of unnecessary stuff while you only need to import HTML template and save it as OFT.
In Outlook 2016:
- Click "New Email" (we will add it straight to the place where it should be :) )
Right-Click either on the Quick Access Toolbar in top-left corner or on a free, grey space of the ribbon and choose "Customize Quick Access Toolbar"
- In the displayed two-pane window, start with left pane and from dropdown on top of the pane, change "Popular Commands" to "All Commands"
- Scroll down left pane until you see two items "Attach File..." and "Attach File" - select second one without three dots/arrow
- Between the panes, use "Add >>", to move it to Quick Access Toolbar (right pane) and click OK to close the window
Now every time you open new email, make sure that the "HTML" is set in Format Text tab - then in top left corner (Quick Access Toolbar), you will see the paperclip icon.
- Click the icon
- Navigate to your HTML template file and select it (single click)
- Lookup the Insert button and click on small arrow on its right side
- Click Insert as text
- Template should load as an HTML (WYSIWYG version)
- Save file as an Outlook template (OTF file)
Voila!
Worth considering: Outlook has it's own way of rendering HMTL (it uses MS Word for processing it) and is somehow limited with mix of old HTML and some CSS. I strongly advise to research Litmus articles as these guys have mastered the non-standardised yet, and literally a dark-art of HTML emails in the closest to bulletproof form. Even with current Gmail Client rendering improvements, I still keep inline CSS as a standard to make sure it looks as good in every client out there as possible. There's many tools that convert your HMTL code with styles to the CSS-inlined version so that should be no problem for you guys. Long time will pass before W3C makes standards for HTML emails so good luck until then - hope it helps.
add a comment |
The most reliable step I've found for Outlook 2007 (and most likely Outlook 2010) is to click New Mail in Outlook (check it's totally empty, and in HTML mode)...
Then click Attach File, choose the HTML file, and at the bottom right click "Insert as Text" <--THE IMPORTANT STEP.
Then click Save As... and choose "OFT" as the format. (Before Save As you can pre-populate the Subject, etc. and it should save it "into" the OFT itself).
Now it appears you can pass around that .oft file and whenever someone double-clicks it everything should appear correctly in Outlook 2007, 2010 and 2013.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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2 Answers
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Although it's quite old topic it is still valid and I'd like to add step-by-step in Outlook 2016 (most likely works also in Outlook 2013). I struggled to get a proper guide and after multiple trial and error approaches from different sources, got it finally working.
There's couple of tools/solutions out there but they're paid and usually include plenty of unnecessary stuff while you only need to import HTML template and save it as OFT.
In Outlook 2016:
- Click "New Email" (we will add it straight to the place where it should be :) )
Right-Click either on the Quick Access Toolbar in top-left corner or on a free, grey space of the ribbon and choose "Customize Quick Access Toolbar"
- In the displayed two-pane window, start with left pane and from dropdown on top of the pane, change "Popular Commands" to "All Commands"
- Scroll down left pane until you see two items "Attach File..." and "Attach File" - select second one without three dots/arrow
- Between the panes, use "Add >>", to move it to Quick Access Toolbar (right pane) and click OK to close the window
Now every time you open new email, make sure that the "HTML" is set in Format Text tab - then in top left corner (Quick Access Toolbar), you will see the paperclip icon.
- Click the icon
- Navigate to your HTML template file and select it (single click)
- Lookup the Insert button and click on small arrow on its right side
- Click Insert as text
- Template should load as an HTML (WYSIWYG version)
- Save file as an Outlook template (OTF file)
Voila!
Worth considering: Outlook has it's own way of rendering HMTL (it uses MS Word for processing it) and is somehow limited with mix of old HTML and some CSS. I strongly advise to research Litmus articles as these guys have mastered the non-standardised yet, and literally a dark-art of HTML emails in the closest to bulletproof form. Even with current Gmail Client rendering improvements, I still keep inline CSS as a standard to make sure it looks as good in every client out there as possible. There's many tools that convert your HMTL code with styles to the CSS-inlined version so that should be no problem for you guys. Long time will pass before W3C makes standards for HTML emails so good luck until then - hope it helps.
add a comment |
Although it's quite old topic it is still valid and I'd like to add step-by-step in Outlook 2016 (most likely works also in Outlook 2013). I struggled to get a proper guide and after multiple trial and error approaches from different sources, got it finally working.
There's couple of tools/solutions out there but they're paid and usually include plenty of unnecessary stuff while you only need to import HTML template and save it as OFT.
In Outlook 2016:
- Click "New Email" (we will add it straight to the place where it should be :) )
Right-Click either on the Quick Access Toolbar in top-left corner or on a free, grey space of the ribbon and choose "Customize Quick Access Toolbar"
- In the displayed two-pane window, start with left pane and from dropdown on top of the pane, change "Popular Commands" to "All Commands"
- Scroll down left pane until you see two items "Attach File..." and "Attach File" - select second one without three dots/arrow
- Between the panes, use "Add >>", to move it to Quick Access Toolbar (right pane) and click OK to close the window
Now every time you open new email, make sure that the "HTML" is set in Format Text tab - then in top left corner (Quick Access Toolbar), you will see the paperclip icon.
- Click the icon
- Navigate to your HTML template file and select it (single click)
- Lookup the Insert button and click on small arrow on its right side
- Click Insert as text
- Template should load as an HTML (WYSIWYG version)
- Save file as an Outlook template (OTF file)
Voila!
Worth considering: Outlook has it's own way of rendering HMTL (it uses MS Word for processing it) and is somehow limited with mix of old HTML and some CSS. I strongly advise to research Litmus articles as these guys have mastered the non-standardised yet, and literally a dark-art of HTML emails in the closest to bulletproof form. Even with current Gmail Client rendering improvements, I still keep inline CSS as a standard to make sure it looks as good in every client out there as possible. There's many tools that convert your HMTL code with styles to the CSS-inlined version so that should be no problem for you guys. Long time will pass before W3C makes standards for HTML emails so good luck until then - hope it helps.
add a comment |
Although it's quite old topic it is still valid and I'd like to add step-by-step in Outlook 2016 (most likely works also in Outlook 2013). I struggled to get a proper guide and after multiple trial and error approaches from different sources, got it finally working.
There's couple of tools/solutions out there but they're paid and usually include plenty of unnecessary stuff while you only need to import HTML template and save it as OFT.
In Outlook 2016:
- Click "New Email" (we will add it straight to the place where it should be :) )
Right-Click either on the Quick Access Toolbar in top-left corner or on a free, grey space of the ribbon and choose "Customize Quick Access Toolbar"
- In the displayed two-pane window, start with left pane and from dropdown on top of the pane, change "Popular Commands" to "All Commands"
- Scroll down left pane until you see two items "Attach File..." and "Attach File" - select second one without three dots/arrow
- Between the panes, use "Add >>", to move it to Quick Access Toolbar (right pane) and click OK to close the window
Now every time you open new email, make sure that the "HTML" is set in Format Text tab - then in top left corner (Quick Access Toolbar), you will see the paperclip icon.
- Click the icon
- Navigate to your HTML template file and select it (single click)
- Lookup the Insert button and click on small arrow on its right side
- Click Insert as text
- Template should load as an HTML (WYSIWYG version)
- Save file as an Outlook template (OTF file)
Voila!
Worth considering: Outlook has it's own way of rendering HMTL (it uses MS Word for processing it) and is somehow limited with mix of old HTML and some CSS. I strongly advise to research Litmus articles as these guys have mastered the non-standardised yet, and literally a dark-art of HTML emails in the closest to bulletproof form. Even with current Gmail Client rendering improvements, I still keep inline CSS as a standard to make sure it looks as good in every client out there as possible. There's many tools that convert your HMTL code with styles to the CSS-inlined version so that should be no problem for you guys. Long time will pass before W3C makes standards for HTML emails so good luck until then - hope it helps.
Although it's quite old topic it is still valid and I'd like to add step-by-step in Outlook 2016 (most likely works also in Outlook 2013). I struggled to get a proper guide and after multiple trial and error approaches from different sources, got it finally working.
There's couple of tools/solutions out there but they're paid and usually include plenty of unnecessary stuff while you only need to import HTML template and save it as OFT.
In Outlook 2016:
- Click "New Email" (we will add it straight to the place where it should be :) )
Right-Click either on the Quick Access Toolbar in top-left corner or on a free, grey space of the ribbon and choose "Customize Quick Access Toolbar"
- In the displayed two-pane window, start with left pane and from dropdown on top of the pane, change "Popular Commands" to "All Commands"
- Scroll down left pane until you see two items "Attach File..." and "Attach File" - select second one without three dots/arrow
- Between the panes, use "Add >>", to move it to Quick Access Toolbar (right pane) and click OK to close the window
Now every time you open new email, make sure that the "HTML" is set in Format Text tab - then in top left corner (Quick Access Toolbar), you will see the paperclip icon.
- Click the icon
- Navigate to your HTML template file and select it (single click)
- Lookup the Insert button and click on small arrow on its right side
- Click Insert as text
- Template should load as an HTML (WYSIWYG version)
- Save file as an Outlook template (OTF file)
Voila!
Worth considering: Outlook has it's own way of rendering HMTL (it uses MS Word for processing it) and is somehow limited with mix of old HTML and some CSS. I strongly advise to research Litmus articles as these guys have mastered the non-standardised yet, and literally a dark-art of HTML emails in the closest to bulletproof form. Even with current Gmail Client rendering improvements, I still keep inline CSS as a standard to make sure it looks as good in every client out there as possible. There's many tools that convert your HMTL code with styles to the CSS-inlined version so that should be no problem for you guys. Long time will pass before W3C makes standards for HTML emails so good luck until then - hope it helps.
edited Oct 20 '16 at 12:32
answered Oct 20 '16 at 12:25
ThielferThielfer
5115
5115
add a comment |
add a comment |
The most reliable step I've found for Outlook 2007 (and most likely Outlook 2010) is to click New Mail in Outlook (check it's totally empty, and in HTML mode)...
Then click Attach File, choose the HTML file, and at the bottom right click "Insert as Text" <--THE IMPORTANT STEP.
Then click Save As... and choose "OFT" as the format. (Before Save As you can pre-populate the Subject, etc. and it should save it "into" the OFT itself).
Now it appears you can pass around that .oft file and whenever someone double-clicks it everything should appear correctly in Outlook 2007, 2010 and 2013.
add a comment |
The most reliable step I've found for Outlook 2007 (and most likely Outlook 2010) is to click New Mail in Outlook (check it's totally empty, and in HTML mode)...
Then click Attach File, choose the HTML file, and at the bottom right click "Insert as Text" <--THE IMPORTANT STEP.
Then click Save As... and choose "OFT" as the format. (Before Save As you can pre-populate the Subject, etc. and it should save it "into" the OFT itself).
Now it appears you can pass around that .oft file and whenever someone double-clicks it everything should appear correctly in Outlook 2007, 2010 and 2013.
add a comment |
The most reliable step I've found for Outlook 2007 (and most likely Outlook 2010) is to click New Mail in Outlook (check it's totally empty, and in HTML mode)...
Then click Attach File, choose the HTML file, and at the bottom right click "Insert as Text" <--THE IMPORTANT STEP.
Then click Save As... and choose "OFT" as the format. (Before Save As you can pre-populate the Subject, etc. and it should save it "into" the OFT itself).
Now it appears you can pass around that .oft file and whenever someone double-clicks it everything should appear correctly in Outlook 2007, 2010 and 2013.
The most reliable step I've found for Outlook 2007 (and most likely Outlook 2010) is to click New Mail in Outlook (check it's totally empty, and in HTML mode)...
Then click Attach File, choose the HTML file, and at the bottom right click "Insert as Text" <--THE IMPORTANT STEP.
Then click Save As... and choose "OFT" as the format. (Before Save As you can pre-populate the Subject, etc. and it should save it "into" the OFT itself).
Now it appears you can pass around that .oft file and whenever someone double-clicks it everything should appear correctly in Outlook 2007, 2010 and 2013.
answered Mar 31 '16 at 3:45
SaltySub2SaltySub2
1313
1313
add a comment |
add a comment |
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1
textheavy.com/tutorials/OFT
– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
Oct 1 '14 at 15:13
Thanks - I have already tried that, the result (for me at least) is the same
– toby1kenobi
Oct 1 '14 at 15:17
Can you provide a link to a copy of one of your OFT's you having problems with? Is the problem at hand the fact that they open in plain text? Have you confirmed the user is allowed to send in HTML from Outlook, and that all chosen recipient contacts are set to send in HTML?
– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
Oct 1 '14 at 15:23
The problem is that they open in plain text
– toby1kenobi
Oct 2 '14 at 8:01
@toby1kenobi Was this ever resolved?
– Termato
Dec 17 '14 at 22:31