- Join, leave, or follow Groups in Outlook - Microsoft Support
Join, leave, or follow Groups in Outlook When you join a group, you gain access to the group mailbox and a group calendar If the group is connected to a work or school account using a qualifying Microsoft 365 subscription, you also gain access to a OneNote notebook and team site
- Add, edit, and remove members of Groups in Outlook - Microsoft Support
Learn how to add and remove group members and to promote and demote group owners in Microsoft 365
- Learn about Groups in Outlook - Microsoft Support
Groups in Microsoft 365 give you collaborative tools to help your coworkers, friends, or family work on a common goal No matter what kind of account you create a Group with, you can send messages to the group with a dedicated email address and schedule events on a group calendar
- Create a contact group in Outlook - Microsoft Support
Training: Watch and learn how to create an email contact group in Outlook so you can email the group instead of sending individual emails
- Add people to your family group - Microsoft Support
Learn how to add members to your family group including child and adult accounts
- Set up groups and teams - Microsoft Support
By default, your team is Private, meaning you'll have to add the people or groups you want on the team Select Public if you want anyone in the organization to be able to find and join the team Add members You can add people, groups, or even entire contact groups
- Send an email to a Group in Outlook - Microsoft Support
Here are a few important things to remember about sending emails to a Group in Outlook: Anyone in your organization can start a group conversation For a public group, anyone in your organization can read and respond to the group's conversations For a private group, only group members can participate in the conversation
- Create, edit, or delete a contact list (or contact group) in Outlook . . .
Contact groups, or distribution lists, are a fast way to send a message to multiple email recipients, especially groups you repeatedly contact
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