Is excel mailing list exportable to Outlook Contacts?

L

Leanne

I am putting a 3,000 list together, and it will have email addresses as well
as postal. Is there a way I can export the list - or format it - so that it
doesnt have to be re-typed for Outlook?
 
G

Gord Dibben

With Outlook open go to File>Import Export>Import from another program or file"

Follow your nose from there to choose your Excel workbook.

I would first save the workbook after giving your 3000 member list a defined
name through Insert>Name>Define.

Outlook likes that.


Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP
 
L

leanneelizabethhayward

Thanks JP,
I appreciate your help. I am having trouble with working in a 'table
format'. I am not sure what is going wrong? Perhaps I haven't set
the spreadsheet up correctly in the first place? I get down to naming
the excel file, and don't know how/where to put in the cell range, and
it goes no further!
My data fields are the following columns which are combination letters/
numbers and are Contact: Premises Name Address.......................
Suburg Pcode Tel Email Address Category
hope you can continue to help.
thanks
Leanne
 
L

leanneelizabethhayward

With Outlook open go to File>Import Export>Import from another program or file"

Follow your nose from there to choose your Excel workbook.
Thanks Gord
I found the insert-name-define, but it rejected the name I put in,
perhaps 'defined name' is something specific.
really appreciate your help,
Leanne
 
G

Gord Dibben

Your sheet has some headers across row1 like Name, Address, City, State, Zip,
Telephone, Email with each contact on a row below those headers.

You select the entire range of data first in Excel

Insert>Name>Define type in a name like MyName which defines the range you
selected.

Save then boop off to Outlook and File>Import/Export


Gord
 
J

Jerret

I'm having a simlar problem. I've got the table set up, but when I click
"File" in outlook 2007, there isn't an option for "Import/Export" and I can't
find it anywhere.

Any ideas?

Thanks, Jerret
 
P

Pam Miller

HI
I am having similar problems- I have defined the data list, which has header
names, with 1 name for the data, and also made sure that there are no other
names defined, yet the error message form outlook is: [outlook][ODBC excel
driver] too many fields defined. can anyone help?
thanks
 
G

Gord Dibben

Example only.............

You have header names in A1:G1

You have individual names, addresses etc. in single rows from A2:G50

Select A1:G50 and Insert>Name>Define.

Give it a name and OK then save the workbook.

Now open Outlook and try the import.

Note: if the worksheet with the data is first in line in your workbook you
don't need the defined name.


Gord

On Sat, 8 Mar 2008 08:19:01 -0800, Pam Miller <Pam
HI
I am having similar problems- I have defined the data list, which has header
names, with 1 name for the data, and also made sure that there are no other
names defined, yet the error message form outlook is: [outlook][ODBC excel
driver] too many fields defined. can anyone help?
thanks

Gord Dibben said:
Your sheet has some headers across row1 like Name, Address, City, State, Zip,
Telephone, Email with each contact on a row below those headers.

You select the entire range of data first in Excel

Insert>Name>Define type in a name like MyName which defines the range you
selected.

Save then boop off to Outlook and File>Import/Export


Gord
 
P

Pam Miller

thanks so much, I must have been making a tiny error, but will in future
follow your steps exactly- een written them to a card to ensure I don't keep
asking the same question, thanks

Gord Dibben said:
Example only.............

You have header names in A1:G1

You have individual names, addresses etc. in single rows from A2:G50

Select A1:G50 and Insert>Name>Define.

Give it a name and OK then save the workbook.

Now open Outlook and try the import.

Note: if the worksheet with the data is first in line in your workbook you
don't need the defined name.


Gord

On Sat, 8 Mar 2008 08:19:01 -0800, Pam Miller <Pam
HI
I am having similar problems- I have defined the data list, which has header
names, with 1 name for the data, and also made sure that there are no other
names defined, yet the error message form outlook is: [outlook][ODBC excel
driver] too many fields defined. can anyone help?
thanks

Gord Dibben said:
Your sheet has some headers across row1 like Name, Address, City, State, Zip,
Telephone, Email with each contact on a row below those headers.

You select the entire range of data first in Excel

Insert>Name>Define type in a name like MyName which defines the range you
selected.

Save then boop off to Outlook and File>Import/Export


Gord

On Nov 7, 12:52 pm, Gord Dibben <gorddibbATshawDOTca> wrote:
With Outlook open go to File>Import Export>Import from another program or file"

Follow your nose from there to choose your Excel workbook.

Thanks Gord
I found the insert-name-define, but it rejected the name I put in,
perhaps 'defined name' is something specific.
really appreciate your help,
Leanne

I would first save the workbook after giving your 3000 member list a defined
name through Insert>Name>Define.

Outlook likes that.

Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP

I am putting a 3,000 list together, and it will have email addresses as well
as postal. Is there a way I can export the list - or format it - so that it
doesnt have to be re-typed for Outlook?
 
G

Gord Dibben

Good luck Pam

Now all you have to do is figure the mapping in Outlook<g>


Gord

On Sat, 8 Mar 2008 23:07:00 -0800, Pam Miller <Pam
thanks so much, I must have been making a tiny error, but will in future
follow your steps exactly- een written them to a card to ensure I don't keep
asking the same question, thanks

Gord Dibben said:
Example only.............

You have header names in A1:G1

You have individual names, addresses etc. in single rows from A2:G50

Select A1:G50 and Insert>Name>Define.

Give it a name and OK then save the workbook.

Now open Outlook and try the import.

Note: if the worksheet with the data is first in line in your workbook you
don't need the defined name.


Gord

On Sat, 8 Mar 2008 08:19:01 -0800, Pam Miller <Pam
HI
I am having similar problems- I have defined the data list, which has header
names, with 1 name for the data, and also made sure that there are no other
names defined, yet the error message form outlook is: [outlook][ODBC excel
driver] too many fields defined. can anyone help?
thanks

:

Your sheet has some headers across row1 like Name, Address, City, State, Zip,
Telephone, Email with each contact on a row below those headers.

You select the entire range of data first in Excel

Insert>Name>Define type in a name like MyName which defines the range you
selected.

Save then boop off to Outlook and File>Import/Export


Gord

On Nov 7, 12:52 pm, Gord Dibben <gorddibbATshawDOTca> wrote:
With Outlook open go to File>Import Export>Import from another program or file"

Follow your nose from there to choose your Excel workbook.

Thanks Gord
I found the insert-name-define, but it rejected the name I put in,
perhaps 'defined name' is something specific.
really appreciate your help,
Leanne

I would first save the workbook after giving your 3000 member list a defined
name through Insert>Name>Define.

Outlook likes that.

Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP

I am putting a 3,000 list together, and it will have email addresses as well
as postal. Is there a way I can export the list - or format it - so that it
doesnt have to be re-typed for Outlook?
 
P

Pam Miller

funnily enough that was the easy bit- my problem was getting to that stage so
all done now!
Pam

Gord Dibben said:
Good luck Pam

Now all you have to do is figure the mapping in Outlook<g>


Gord

On Sat, 8 Mar 2008 23:07:00 -0800, Pam Miller <Pam
thanks so much, I must have been making a tiny error, but will in future
follow your steps exactly- een written them to a card to ensure I don't keep
asking the same question, thanks

Gord Dibben said:
Example only.............

You have header names in A1:G1

You have individual names, addresses etc. in single rows from A2:G50

Select A1:G50 and Insert>Name>Define.

Give it a name and OK then save the workbook.

Now open Outlook and try the import.

Note: if the worksheet with the data is first in line in your workbook you
don't need the defined name.


Gord

HI
I am having similar problems- I have defined the data list, which has header
names, with 1 name for the data, and also made sure that there are no other
names defined, yet the error message form outlook is: [outlook][ODBC excel
driver] too many fields defined. can anyone help?
thanks

:

Your sheet has some headers across row1 like Name, Address, City, State, Zip,
Telephone, Email with each contact on a row below those headers.

You select the entire range of data first in Excel

Insert>Name>Define type in a name like MyName which defines the range you
selected.

Save then boop off to Outlook and File>Import/Export


Gord

On Nov 7, 12:52 pm, Gord Dibben <gorddibbATshawDOTca> wrote:
With Outlook open go to File>Import Export>Import from another program or file"

Follow your nose from there to choose your Excel workbook.

Thanks Gord
I found the insert-name-define, but it rejected the name I put in,
perhaps 'defined name' is something specific.
really appreciate your help,
Leanne

I would first save the workbook after giving your 3000 member list a defined
name through Insert>Name>Define.

Outlook likes that.

Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP

I am putting a 3,000 list together, and it will have email addresses as well
as postal. Is there a way I can export the list - or format it - so that it
doesnt have to be re-typed for Outlook?
 
G

Gord Dibben

Good to hear.

Glad to help.


funnily enough that was the easy bit- my problem was getting to that stage so
all done now!
Pam

Gord Dibben said:
Good luck Pam

Now all you have to do is figure the mapping in Outlook<g>


Gord

On Sat, 8 Mar 2008 23:07:00 -0800, Pam Miller <Pam
thanks so much, I must have been making a tiny error, but will in future
follow your steps exactly- een written them to a card to ensure I don't keep
asking the same question, thanks

:

Example only.............

You have header names in A1:G1

You have individual names, addresses etc. in single rows from A2:G50

Select A1:G50 and Insert>Name>Define.

Give it a name and OK then save the workbook.

Now open Outlook and try the import.

Note: if the worksheet with the data is first in line in your workbook you
don't need the defined name.


Gord

HI
I am having similar problems- I have defined the data list, which has header
names, with 1 name for the data, and also made sure that there are no other
names defined, yet the error message form outlook is: [outlook][ODBC excel
driver] too many fields defined. can anyone help?
thanks

:

Your sheet has some headers across row1 like Name, Address, City, State, Zip,
Telephone, Email with each contact on a row below those headers.

You select the entire range of data first in Excel

Insert>Name>Define type in a name like MyName which defines the range you
selected.

Save then boop off to Outlook and File>Import/Export


Gord

On Nov 7, 12:52 pm, Gord Dibben <gorddibbATshawDOTca> wrote:
With Outlook open go to File>Import Export>Import from another program or file"

Follow your nose from there to choose your Excel workbook.

Thanks Gord
I found the insert-name-define, but it rejected the name I put in,
perhaps 'defined name' is something specific.
really appreciate your help,
Leanne

I would first save the workbook after giving your 3000 member list a defined
name through Insert>Name>Define.

Outlook likes that.

Gord Dibben MS Excel MVP

I am putting a 3,000 list together, and it will have email addresses as well
as postal. Is there a way I can export the list - or format it - so that it
doesnt have to be re-typed for Outlook?
 
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