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Hey nibblers, I finally decided to not publish the book and instead just post it on my website as an blog post to read. This way I can update everything I need to.
I did end up using Copilot to help write it more like a technical manual to learn. I cover quite a bit for beginners and some information for advanced Outlook/Exchange techs. I have 2 chapters about sales I left off as the viewers are mostly people searching for errors and such on my website. Happy to post the sales info here though by request.
Link to read: https://callthatgirl.biz/technicians-guide-for-mastering-new-outlook
Chapter outlines below:
Chapter 9 – Microsoft Home and Business Accounts
This chapter explains the unique behaviors of Microsoft personal accounts, Microsoft 365 Family/Personal subscriptions, and small business environments. These accounts often behave differently from enterprise tenants and require special handling during migration.
I did end up using Copilot to help write it more like a technical manual to learn. I cover quite a bit for beginners and some information for advanced Outlook/Exchange techs. I have 2 chapters about sales I left off as the viewers are mostly people searching for errors and such on my website. Happy to post the sales info here though by request.
Link to read: https://callthatgirl.biz/technicians-guide-for-mastering-new-outlook
Chapter outlines below:
Chapter 1 – Outlook Email Accounts and Data
This chapter provides a technical breakdown of how Outlook stores, syncs, and manages data across POP, IMAP, PST, Exchange, and GWSMO environments. Understanding these structures is essential before attempting any migration to New Outlook.Chapter 2 – New Outlook: Onboarding Your Clients
This chapter outlines the onboarding workflow for transitioning users from Outlook Classic to New Outlook. You’ll learn how to prepare the environment, evaluate compatibility, set expectations, and guide clients through the initial setup.Chapter 3 – Backing Up PST Files and Other Critical Data
Before any migration, data protection is non‑negotiable. This chapter covers backup strategies for PST files, local archives, signatures, templates, rules, and other user‑specific assets that may not automatically migrate.Chapter 4 – Identifying What Data Needs to Migrate
Not all data in Outlook Classic is stored in the same place—or even in a format New Outlook can use. This chapter helps you identify which data types must be manually migrated, which will sync automatically, and which require special handling.Chapter 5 – What Will Not Migrate from Classic Outlook
New Outlook does not support every feature found in Outlook Classic. This chapter provides a detailed list of unsupported features, deprecated workflows, and legacy components that technicians must plan around.Chapter 6 – Manual Data Migration Procedures
This chapter provides step‑by‑step instructions for manually migrating data that New Outlook does not automatically import. Topics include PST handling, signature recreation, rules rebuilding, and custom configuration replication.Chapter 7 – Setting Up the New Outlook
This chapter walks through the technical setup of New Outlook, including account configuration, authentication requirements, profile behavior, and best practices for ensuring a stable, predictable user experience.Chapter 8 – Common Technical Issues and How to Resolve Them
Technicians will encounter errors, sync failures, missing features, and unexpected behavior during the transition. This chapter documents the most common issues and provides practical troubleshooting workflows.Chapter 9 – Microsoft Home and Business Accounts
This chapter explains the unique behaviors of Microsoft personal accounts, Microsoft 365 Family/Personal subscriptions, and small business environments. These accounts often behave differently from enterprise tenants and require special handling during migration.