Macro Systems Blog
Outlook vs. Gmail
Email is obviously an incredibly useful tool in the business setting, helping with a wide variety of communication needs. On the other hand, in order to make the most of your emails, you need to have an email client that allows you to do so. Below we’re pitting two major email clients against each other to see which one offers the features that best suit your business and its needs.
Microsoft Outlook vs. Google’s Gmail. To begin, let’s consider the actual interface that a user must navigate in each option.
Interface
Your preferences will come heavily into play as you weigh the two very different interfaces against each other, with each taking a very different approach. Gmail keeps it very simple, clearly and prominently labeling a user’s options to make it relatively easy to grow accustomed to. Different options will appear based on context, hidden until the user completes an action or accesses the in-message menu.
However, Outlook takes the opposite tack, providing users a variety of options to make use of to the point where a user could review multiple email accounts simultaneously. On the other hand, many may find all of the options Outlook offers to be intimidating, but the Office 365 version of Outlook does provide a trimmed-down version of the option Ribbon that stretches across the top of the screen. All you have to do to switch between these options is to click on the downward caret in the far right of the Ribbon.
Nonetheless, it provides its users so many options that Outlook presents its greatest weakness: its complexity. In addition to the Ribbon - stuffed with options as it is - there are three panes that make up the rest of the program. You first have a comprehensive list of all email accounts you use Outlook to manage, second, a list of your messages that allows you to run inbox-specific searches and sort them based on assorted criteria, and third, a basic reading pane to view your messages, with the options to reply, reply all, or forward the message. That being said, Outlook is what the majority of businesses have been utilizing for decades, so chances are you are pretty familiar with it.
Composing Messages
This is a really critical consideration to take into account when you are trying to determine the best email client. While Outlook may arguably have too many features displayed in its various menus and toolbars, this issue was not carried over into the message composer… although this is not to say that a user is exactly short on options when it comes to formatting their email message. Microsoft has also made it easy to share documents stored in OneDrive, a user’s PC, or items created in Outlook itself. The Ribbon, of course, offers a variety of other features to make creating, scheduling, and reviewing your emails much simpler.
Comparatively, while Google offers a little less through Gmail, the apparent focus on simplicity gives a user a very usable solution with all the features that most will ever really need. Attaching media to an email can admittedly be a complicated process, namely due to the three separate ways to do so. There’s a button to insert files from the computer’s storage, a button for inserting photos from Google Photos, and a button to insert files from your Google Drive. Finally, as a very compelling feature, Gmail allows you to cancel a message that is being sent if you catch your mistake quickly enough.
Email Management
Lastly, in order for you to actually be productive as you use your email, it is best that you have some level of organization to it. This is why both of our subjects today feature some degree of management functionality.
Outlook offers subscribers to Office 365 an automated means of prioritizing emails via its Focused Inbox feature. After a little bit of time “training” this feature, you can rely on it to separate your imperative messages from incoming sales and other promotional correspondence. Messages in the same conversation can be consolidated, making conversations much simpler to read, and folders and subfolders can be used to keep better track of them.
A user in-the-know can also create rules in Outlook to make the management of their emails even easier. For example, a rule can be created that automatically files any messages with the word “Project” in the subject line into a specialized folder, as well as other actions based on assorted criteria.
Gmail is similarly customizable, in terms of management and organization, with folders and tabs to differentiate your messages between and settings that can be configured to automatically take care of this differentiation for you. Nonetheless, if one of your conversations branches out into multiple threads, Gmail can become somewhat confusing, as all of its messages are just arranged chronologically. Having said that, Gmail somewhat redeems itself with its Labels. Labels allow you to organize your email based on the context of the message, by applying a label to each message as it comes in. These labels can also be nested within each other - so let’s say that you were involved in a lot of project work, you could create a folder for project-related emails, and sub-folders for individual projects.
There are a lot of considerations to make when deciding upon an email platform, with far more variables than we’ve covered here. For more assistance, reach out to the expert consultants at Macro Systems today. We can help you decide upon the best business technology for your needs, allowing you to focus on other pressing matters. Give us a call at 703-359-9211 to learn more.
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