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Default Urgent! How do I create mailing labels with Excel 2007?

UGH! it's not in Help or anywhere...
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Default Urgent! How do I create mailing labels with Excel 2007?

Perhaps look in Word Help, that's where most of us print labels from.

Dawn523 wrote:

UGH! it's not in Help or anywhere...


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Default Urgent! How do I create mailing labels with Excel 2007?

Since MailMerge is part of Word you might want to check the help there or
post this in a Word newsgroup. Excel is only used a source/database and I
can't imagine that has changed in Excel 2007.


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Peo Sjoblom


"Dawn523" wrote in message
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UGH! it's not in Help or anywhere...



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Default Urgent! How do I create mailing labels with Excel 2007?

A bit of a long reply but in Excel 2003 help there is a good guide to this:-

Print labels by using Excel data in a Word mail merge

By creating a mail merge in Word, and then linking to a list in Excel, you
can turn worksheet data such as the addresses of your customers into
printable mailing labels.

In Microsoft Excel, set up the data to use in the mail merge.
How?

Make sure the data is in list (list: A series of rows that contains related
data or a series of rows that you designate to function as a datasheet by
using the Create List command.) format: each column has a label in the first
row and contains similar facts, and there are no blank rows or columns within
the list. You'll use the column labels to specify what data goes where in the
mail merge.
Make sure the column labels clearly identify the type of data in the column;
this helps you select the right data as you construct the mail merge. For
example, labels such as First Name, Last Name, Address, and City are better
than Column 1, Column 2, Column 3, and Column 4.
Make sure you have a separate column for each element that you want to
include in the mail merge. For example, if you're creating form letters and
want to use each recipient's first name in the body of the letter, make sure
you have a column that contains first names, rather than a single column with
both first and last names. If you want to refer to each recipient by title
and last name, such as Mr. Smith, you can use a single column containing both
titles and last names, or use one column for title and another for last name.
To make the list easy to find when you select it for the mail merge, give it
a name (name: A word or string of characters that represents a cell, range of
cells, formula, or constant value. Use easy-to-understand names, such as
Products, to refer to hard to understand ranges, such as Sales!C20:C30.):
How?

Select the entire list.
On the Insert menu, point to Name, and then click Define.
Type a name for the list.
Click Add, and then click Close.
Save and close the workbook that contains the data.
Switch to Microsoft Word.
On the Tools menu, point to Letters and Mailings, and then click Mail Merge
Wizard.
In the first two steps of the Mail Merge Wizard, select the document type
and start the document. If you're creating mailing labels, click Labels in
Step 1, and then click Label options in Step 2 to select the size and type of
labels to print.
For more information about these steps, see Word Help.

In the third step, under Select recipients, click Use an existing list, and
then click Browse.
In the Look in list, click the folder in which you saved the workbook with
your data, click the workbook, and then click Open.
In the Select Table dialog box, locate and click your list. Make sure the
First row of data contains column headers check box is selected, and then
click OK.
In the Mail Merge Recipients dialog box, click any column labels in your
data that correspond to the Word identifiers on the left. This step makes
inserting your data in the form documents easier. For more information about
matching fields, see Word Help.
If you want to include only selected recipients in the mail merge, click
Edit recipient list and select the recipients you want.
Use the rest of the wizard steps to write, add recipient information,
preview, personalize, save, and print or e-mail your documents. For
information about these steps, see Word Help.
Notes

While Word has your workbook open to create the mail merge, you can't open
the workbook in Excel. If you need to see the data and its column labels, go
to Step 3 or 5 of the wizard and click Edit recipient list.
You can continue to use mail merges with Excel data that you created in
earlier versions of Word. To open and use these mail merges in Word 2002 or
later, you'll need to install Microsoft Query. Query is no longer required to
create new mail merges in Word 2002 or later.


--
John
MOS Master Instructor Office 2000, 2002 & 2003
Please reply & rate any replies you get

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"Dawn523" wrote:

UGH! it's not in Help or anywhere...

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