Sunday, June 10, 2012

5 Tips on using Bcc in Outlook Email

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AppId is over the quota

It's kind of funny that a software application would use abbreviations that refer to pre-software days.  Remember carbon copies? Cc means carbon copy and Bcc means blind carbon copy. For emailing, you use Cc when you want to copy others publicly, and Bcc when you want to do it privately. Any recipients on the Bcc line of an email are not visible to others on the email. These five tips get beginners started and provide info for those who already know how to use Bcc.

Probably one of the biggest hurtles that customers face is figuring out how to add or remove Bcc to or from an email.

To do that, open your email message, and on the Options tab in the Show Fields group, click Bcc.

 Add BCC in Outlook

Bcc appears in the Send area of your email, below Cc. (Cc appears in the Send area by default.)

 Add BCC in Outlook

To remove Bcc from your email, again go to the Options tab in the Show Fields group, and click Bcc. Once you add (or remove) Bcc, it stays that way for all email messages.

While others can't see who's on the Bcc line of the email you send, you might want to remind yourself who you included.

To do that, go to your Sent Items folder and open the message with Bcc recipients. (By default, all sent messages are stored in the Outlook Sent Items folder.)  

 Send BCC in Outlook

All recipients appear in the header section of your message.

Most people know when to use the Cc line--you put people there who you need to keep in the loop even though they're not the primary people you're sending to. When you want to keep recipients hidden from people on the To: line, then you add them to the Bcc line. Tip #3 and 4# give you two reasons you might want to do that.  

If your name is on the Bcc list, you won't receive any emails if someone on the To or Cc line replies to the original email. This is especially handy when there are lots of people on the To or Cc line who Reply All during a long email conversation. Your inbox would be inundated with emails when all you needed to care about was the first one.

Take note! If you're on the Bcc line of an email and you reply to the email, your secret's out-everyone on the To and Cc lines knows you were Bcc'd. Why does this matter?  Let's say you send an email to a colleague gently reminding him or her about a deliverable that's long overdue. You want to let your manager in on this, so you include her on the Bcc line. But if she replies to the email-uh-oh! Your colleague knows you've "informed" your manager. Might make for some awkwardness in the workplace for a while!

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More info on Bcc:

Say it, don't spray it  

View Bcc recipients of an email message

Prevent recipient names from showing by using Bcc

Use Bcc to keep names off the To line


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