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address database question
I am setting up an address database in Excel 2003 that I need to be able to
use to make labels for mailings. I have people that are in different "categories" and will want to group them by that category, depending on who I am sending the mailing to. For instance, I have a person, Person A, who is a general supporter, lives in the area, and sponsors a child. Person A is in three of the possible 5 categories. Another person, Person B, might be simply a general supporter (i.e., in one category). How can I best organize the data - and the headings - so that I can make labels for just the general supporters, for instance, or for the sponsors? Do I have to enter each person's data once for each category they fit under with a column, "Type," with a code in that cell for the specific category? So - Person A would have 3 rows, all the same, except for the Type Code? Or can I put 3 or more "Type Codes" under the category "Type," separated by commas or something, and then organize them somehow when it comes to printing them out? And then...is there a way to prevent from printing out that "Type" and "Type Code" when it comes to printing the labels? I understand how to choose the fields I want in the label, so maybe it's that simple for that part. I actually wanted to only use Outlook for this - so I would only have to enter it in one place - but I was never able to get the labels to print properly so I have to do it this way, for now. Frustrating! Thank you so much for your help. --Jan |
address database question
If you use word to print the labels you better use separate columns to
indicate categories with a simple "x" or something. That makes selecting and printing in word easy. I use that with a couple databases. So columns 1 through 5 or so would be the data... first name, last name, address etc. column 6 is "general supporter", column 7 is "sponsors a child", etc. It's a little slow on input but makes the selecting and printing very easy. You select by the category columns but only print the data columns. John jviren wrote: I am setting up an address database in Excel 2003 that I need to be able to use to make labels for mailings. I have people that are in different "categories" and will want to group them by that category, depending on who I am sending the mailing to. For instance, I have a person, Person A, who is a general supporter, lives in the area, and sponsors a child. Person A is in three of the possible 5 categories. Another person, Person B, might be simply a general supporter (i.e., in one category). How can I best organize the data - and the headings - so that I can make labels for just the general supporters, for instance, or for the sponsors? Do I have to enter each person's data once for each category they fit under with a column, "Type," with a code in that cell for the specific category? So - Person A would have 3 rows, all the same, except for the Type Code? Or can I put 3 or more "Type Codes" under the category "Type," separated by commas or something, and then organize them somehow when it comes to printing them out? And then...is there a way to prevent from printing out that "Type" and "Type Code" when it comes to printing the labels? I understand how to choose the fields I want in the label, so maybe it's that simple for that part. I actually wanted to only use Outlook for this - so I would only have to enter it in one place - but I was never able to get the labels to print properly so I have to do it this way, for now. Frustrating! Thank you so much for your help. --Jan |
address database question
I'm not sure there's a 'best' way to organize the data. But from past
experience and from what I hear you saying here, you are probably better off having separate columns for your categories of people. I'd just use a simple scheme of an X in the cell if they are in the category or leave empty if not. To try to list all 5 possible categories and their combinations would be cumbersome. If they could only be in one of the 5 it would be different, but being able to be in multiple categories or needing to do a mail merge based on being in one or more of the 5 categories will be easier this way, I think. Each person's record should be complete in a single row on the sheet. I would be very granular in laying it out: separate columns for first name, middle name, last name, suffix (like M.D. PhD) and prefix (Mr. Ms. Dr.). One for City, State and zip - those can be used to determine location in general area or outlying. Check out the Excel Help topic "About Filtering" which will lead to auto-filtering and advanced filtering to help you pick and choose which records to use for a given mail merge. You are right about being able to easily not print any fields during your printings. Only the ones you choose will be used. Here's a link to an Excel workbook that I put together for someone recently who was looking in to setting up Excel to use as a data source for a Word mail merge and envelop printing. You may find it helpful also: http://www.jlathamsite.com/Teach/Wor...DataSource.xls it documents the complete basic process. "jviren" wrote: I am setting up an address database in Excel 2003 that I need to be able to use to make labels for mailings. I have people that are in different "categories" and will want to group them by that category, depending on who I am sending the mailing to. For instance, I have a person, Person A, who is a general supporter, lives in the area, and sponsors a child. Person A is in three of the possible 5 categories. Another person, Person B, might be simply a general supporter (i.e., in one category). How can I best organize the data - and the headings - so that I can make labels for just the general supporters, for instance, or for the sponsors? Do I have to enter each person's data once for each category they fit under with a column, "Type," with a code in that cell for the specific category? So - Person A would have 3 rows, all the same, except for the Type Code? Or can I put 3 or more "Type Codes" under the category "Type," separated by commas or something, and then organize them somehow when it comes to printing them out? And then...is there a way to prevent from printing out that "Type" and "Type Code" when it comes to printing the labels? I understand how to choose the fields I want in the label, so maybe it's that simple for that part. I actually wanted to only use Outlook for this - so I would only have to enter it in one place - but I was never able to get the labels to print properly so I have to do it this way, for now. Frustrating! Thank you so much for your help. --Jan |
address database question
Thank you so much for the suggestion. I will try this and see how it goes!
--Jan "John" wrote: If you use word to print the labels you better use separate columns to indicate categories with a simple "x" or something. That makes selecting and printing in word easy. I use that with a couple databases. So columns 1 through 5 or so would be the data... first name, last name, address etc. column 6 is "general supporter", column 7 is "sponsors a child", etc. It's a little slow on input but makes the selecting and printing very easy. You select by the category columns but only print the data columns. John jviren wrote: I am setting up an address database in Excel 2003 that I need to be able to use to make labels for mailings. I have people that are in different "categories" and will want to group them by that category, depending on who I am sending the mailing to. For instance, I have a person, Person A, who is a general supporter, lives in the area, and sponsors a child. Person A is in three of the possible 5 categories. Another person, Person B, might be simply a general supporter (i.e., in one category). How can I best organize the data - and the headings - so that I can make labels for just the general supporters, for instance, or for the sponsors? Do I have to enter each person's data once for each category they fit under with a column, "Type," with a code in that cell for the specific category? So - Person A would have 3 rows, all the same, except for the Type Code? Or can I put 3 or more "Type Codes" under the category "Type," separated by commas or something, and then organize them somehow when it comes to printing them out? And then...is there a way to prevent from printing out that "Type" and "Type Code" when it comes to printing the labels? I understand how to choose the fields I want in the label, so maybe it's that simple for that part. I actually wanted to only use Outlook for this - so I would only have to enter it in one place - but I was never able to get the labels to print properly so I have to do it this way, for now. Frustrating! Thank you so much for your help. --Jan |
address database question
Thank you so much for answering my question. I did first start out thinking
I should have separate columns for type and "x" in the appropriate one, so I will stay with that. Also, I copied and pasted the old supporter list into the new document (which is a template I found on the Microsoft Excel site). The shading (every other line) and cell outlines (lightly around all edges of the cell) didn't copy. How can I fix this? I have tried formatting it the same but can't get the same color. The only thing I can think of is to copy the columns and then paste special. Would that work? --Jan "JLatham" wrote: I'm not sure there's a 'best' way to organize the data. But from past experience and from what I hear you saying here, you are probably better off having separate columns for your categories of people. I'd just use a simple scheme of an X in the cell if they are in the category or leave empty if not. To try to list all 5 possible categories and their combinations would be cumbersome. If they could only be in one of the 5 it would be different, but being able to be in multiple categories or needing to do a mail merge based on being in one or more of the 5 categories will be easier this way, I think. Each person's record should be complete in a single row on the sheet. I would be very granular in laying it out: separate columns for first name, middle name, last name, suffix (like M.D. PhD) and prefix (Mr. Ms. Dr.). One for City, State and zip - those can be used to determine location in general area or outlying. Check out the Excel Help topic "About Filtering" which will lead to auto-filtering and advanced filtering to help you pick and choose which records to use for a given mail merge. You are right about being able to easily not print any fields during your printings. Only the ones you choose will be used. Here's a link to an Excel workbook that I put together for someone recently who was looking in to setting up Excel to use as a data source for a Word mail merge and envelop printing. You may find it helpful also: http://www.jlathamsite.com/Teach/Wor...DataSource.xls it documents the complete basic process. "jviren" wrote: I am setting up an address database in Excel 2003 that I need to be able to use to make labels for mailings. I have people that are in different "categories" and will want to group them by that category, depending on who I am sending the mailing to. For instance, I have a person, Person A, who is a general supporter, lives in the area, and sponsors a child. Person A is in three of the possible 5 categories. Another person, Person B, might be simply a general supporter (i.e., in one category). How can I best organize the data - and the headings - so that I can make labels for just the general supporters, for instance, or for the sponsors? Do I have to enter each person's data once for each category they fit under with a column, "Type," with a code in that cell for the specific category? So - Person A would have 3 rows, all the same, except for the Type Code? Or can I put 3 or more "Type Codes" under the category "Type," separated by commas or something, and then organize them somehow when it comes to printing them out? And then...is there a way to prevent from printing out that "Type" and "Type Code" when it comes to printing the labels? I understand how to choose the fields I want in the label, so maybe it's that simple for that part. I actually wanted to only use Outlook for this - so I would only have to enter it in one place - but I was never able to get the labels to print properly so I have to do it this way, for now. Frustrating! Thank you so much for your help. --Jan |
address database question
If you can point me to the template you used, I can go take a look at it and
give you advice on how to set your's up exactly like it. But here's a trick that may work without having to do all of that. Start a new workbook based on that template with all of its nice layout/formatting. Go back to your old supporter list and again copy the information. But when you go to paste it into the new document, choose Edit | Paste Special and check the box next to the [Values] option. This should just paste the information into the sheet without affecting the formatting of the rows and cells. Doing a straight copy and paste copies everything, including format, which is what happened to you the first time. "jviren" wrote: Thank you so much for answering my question. I did first start out thinking I should have separate columns for type and "x" in the appropriate one, so I will stay with that. Also, I copied and pasted the old supporter list into the new document (which is a template I found on the Microsoft Excel site). The shading (every other line) and cell outlines (lightly around all edges of the cell) didn't copy. How can I fix this? I have tried formatting it the same but can't get the same color. The only thing I can think of is to copy the columns and then paste special. Would that work? --Jan "JLatham" wrote: I'm not sure there's a 'best' way to organize the data. But from past experience and from what I hear you saying here, you are probably better off having separate columns for your categories of people. I'd just use a simple scheme of an X in the cell if they are in the category or leave empty if not. To try to list all 5 possible categories and their combinations would be cumbersome. If they could only be in one of the 5 it would be different, but being able to be in multiple categories or needing to do a mail merge based on being in one or more of the 5 categories will be easier this way, I think. Each person's record should be complete in a single row on the sheet. I would be very granular in laying it out: separate columns for first name, middle name, last name, suffix (like M.D. PhD) and prefix (Mr. Ms. Dr.). One for City, State and zip - those can be used to determine location in general area or outlying. Check out the Excel Help topic "About Filtering" which will lead to auto-filtering and advanced filtering to help you pick and choose which records to use for a given mail merge. You are right about being able to easily not print any fields during your printings. Only the ones you choose will be used. Here's a link to an Excel workbook that I put together for someone recently who was looking in to setting up Excel to use as a data source for a Word mail merge and envelop printing. You may find it helpful also: http://www.jlathamsite.com/Teach/Wor...DataSource.xls it documents the complete basic process. "jviren" wrote: I am setting up an address database in Excel 2003 that I need to be able to use to make labels for mailings. I have people that are in different "categories" and will want to group them by that category, depending on who I am sending the mailing to. For instance, I have a person, Person A, who is a general supporter, lives in the area, and sponsors a child. Person A is in three of the possible 5 categories. Another person, Person B, might be simply a general supporter (i.e., in one category). How can I best organize the data - and the headings - so that I can make labels for just the general supporters, for instance, or for the sponsors? Do I have to enter each person's data once for each category they fit under with a column, "Type," with a code in that cell for the specific category? So - Person A would have 3 rows, all the same, except for the Type Code? Or can I put 3 or more "Type Codes" under the category "Type," separated by commas or something, and then organize them somehow when it comes to printing them out? And then...is there a way to prevent from printing out that "Type" and "Type Code" when it comes to printing the labels? I understand how to choose the fields I want in the label, so maybe it's that simple for that part. I actually wanted to only use Outlook for this - so I would only have to enter it in one place - but I was never able to get the labels to print properly so I have to do it this way, for now. Frustrating! Thank you so much for your help. --Jan |
address database question
Thank you again. The template I used is he
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/te...208681033.aspx. I really like the shading and layout. I changed/added a bunch of columns, though. I will try what you said and get back to you. --Jan "JLatham" wrote: If you can point me to the template you used, I can go take a look at it and give you advice on how to set your's up exactly like it. But here's a trick that may work without having to do all of that. Start a new workbook based on that template with all of its nice layout/formatting. Go back to your old supporter list and again copy the information. But when you go to paste it into the new document, choose Edit | Paste Special and check the box next to the [Values] option. This should just paste the information into the sheet without affecting the formatting of the rows and cells. Doing a straight copy and paste copies everything, including format, which is what happened to you the first time. "jviren" wrote: Thank you so much for answering my question. I did first start out thinking I should have separate columns for type and "x" in the appropriate one, so I will stay with that. Also, I copied and pasted the old supporter list into the new document (which is a template I found on the Microsoft Excel site). The shading (every other line) and cell outlines (lightly around all edges of the cell) didn't copy. How can I fix this? I have tried formatting it the same but can't get the same color. The only thing I can think of is to copy the columns and then paste special. Would that work? --Jan "JLatham" wrote: I'm not sure there's a 'best' way to organize the data. But from past experience and from what I hear you saying here, you are probably better off having separate columns for your categories of people. I'd just use a simple scheme of an X in the cell if they are in the category or leave empty if not. To try to list all 5 possible categories and their combinations would be cumbersome. If they could only be in one of the 5 it would be different, but being able to be in multiple categories or needing to do a mail merge based on being in one or more of the 5 categories will be easier this way, I think. Each person's record should be complete in a single row on the sheet. I would be very granular in laying it out: separate columns for first name, middle name, last name, suffix (like M.D. PhD) and prefix (Mr. Ms. Dr.). One for City, State and zip - those can be used to determine location in general area or outlying. Check out the Excel Help topic "About Filtering" which will lead to auto-filtering and advanced filtering to help you pick and choose which records to use for a given mail merge. You are right about being able to easily not print any fields during your printings. Only the ones you choose will be used. Here's a link to an Excel workbook that I put together for someone recently who was looking in to setting up Excel to use as a data source for a Word mail merge and envelop printing. You may find it helpful also: http://www.jlathamsite.com/Teach/Wor...DataSource.xls it documents the complete basic process. "jviren" wrote: I am setting up an address database in Excel 2003 that I need to be able to use to make labels for mailings. I have people that are in different "categories" and will want to group them by that category, depending on who I am sending the mailing to. For instance, I have a person, Person A, who is a general supporter, lives in the area, and sponsors a child. Person A is in three of the possible 5 categories. Another person, Person B, might be simply a general supporter (i.e., in one category). How can I best organize the data - and the headings - so that I can make labels for just the general supporters, for instance, or for the sponsors? Do I have to enter each person's data once for each category they fit under with a column, "Type," with a code in that cell for the specific category? So - Person A would have 3 rows, all the same, except for the Type Code? Or can I put 3 or more "Type Codes" under the category "Type," separated by commas or something, and then organize them somehow when it comes to printing them out? And then...is there a way to prevent from printing out that "Type" and "Type Code" when it comes to printing the labels? I understand how to choose the fields I want in the label, so maybe it's that simple for that part. I actually wanted to only use Outlook for this - so I would only have to enter it in one place - but I was never able to get the labels to print properly so I have to do it this way, for now. Frustrating! Thank you so much for your help. --Jan |
address database question
Your latest suggestion worked (checking "values" when pasting special).
Thanks! I think I'm okay so far, unless I have trouble printing the labels. I have HOURS of typing to do, though. Thank you so much. --Jan "JLatham" wrote: If you can point me to the template you used, I can go take a look at it and give you advice on how to set your's up exactly like it. But here's a trick that may work without having to do all of that. Start a new workbook based on that template with all of its nice layout/formatting. Go back to your old supporter list and again copy the information. But when you go to paste it into the new document, choose Edit | Paste Special and check the box next to the [Values] option. This should just paste the information into the sheet without affecting the formatting of the rows and cells. Doing a straight copy and paste copies everything, including format, which is what happened to you the first time. "jviren" wrote: Thank you so much for answering my question. I did first start out thinking I should have separate columns for type and "x" in the appropriate one, so I will stay with that. Also, I copied and pasted the old supporter list into the new document (which is a template I found on the Microsoft Excel site). The shading (every other line) and cell outlines (lightly around all edges of the cell) didn't copy. How can I fix this? I have tried formatting it the same but can't get the same color. The only thing I can think of is to copy the columns and then paste special. Would that work? --Jan "JLatham" wrote: I'm not sure there's a 'best' way to organize the data. But from past experience and from what I hear you saying here, you are probably better off having separate columns for your categories of people. I'd just use a simple scheme of an X in the cell if they are in the category or leave empty if not. To try to list all 5 possible categories and their combinations would be cumbersome. If they could only be in one of the 5 it would be different, but being able to be in multiple categories or needing to do a mail merge based on being in one or more of the 5 categories will be easier this way, I think. Each person's record should be complete in a single row on the sheet. I would be very granular in laying it out: separate columns for first name, middle name, last name, suffix (like M.D. PhD) and prefix (Mr. Ms. Dr.). One for City, State and zip - those can be used to determine location in general area or outlying. Check out the Excel Help topic "About Filtering" which will lead to auto-filtering and advanced filtering to help you pick and choose which records to use for a given mail merge. You are right about being able to easily not print any fields during your printings. Only the ones you choose will be used. Here's a link to an Excel workbook that I put together for someone recently who was looking in to setting up Excel to use as a data source for a Word mail merge and envelop printing. You may find it helpful also: http://www.jlathamsite.com/Teach/Wor...DataSource.xls it documents the complete basic process. "jviren" wrote: I am setting up an address database in Excel 2003 that I need to be able to use to make labels for mailings. I have people that are in different "categories" and will want to group them by that category, depending on who I am sending the mailing to. For instance, I have a person, Person A, who is a general supporter, lives in the area, and sponsors a child. Person A is in three of the possible 5 categories. Another person, Person B, might be simply a general supporter (i.e., in one category). How can I best organize the data - and the headings - so that I can make labels for just the general supporters, for instance, or for the sponsors? Do I have to enter each person's data once for each category they fit under with a column, "Type," with a code in that cell for the specific category? So - Person A would have 3 rows, all the same, except for the Type Code? Or can I put 3 or more "Type Codes" under the category "Type," separated by commas or something, and then organize them somehow when it comes to printing them out? And then...is there a way to prevent from printing out that "Type" and "Type Code" when it comes to printing the labels? I understand how to choose the fields I want in the label, so maybe it's that simple for that part. I actually wanted to only use Outlook for this - so I would only have to enter it in one place - but I was never able to get the labels to print properly so I have to do it this way, for now. Frustrating! Thank you so much for your help. --Jan |
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