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  1. Use mail merge for bulk email, letters, labels, and envelopes

    How to use mail merge in Word to create custom documents, envelopes, email, and labels.

  2. Mail merge using an Excel spreadsheet - Microsoft Support

    How to use an Excel spreadsheet with mail merge in Word to create mailing lists for labels, envelopes, and documents.

  3. How to use the Mail Merge feature in Word to create and to print …

    This article explains how to use the Mail Merge feature in Microsoft Word to create and to print form letters by using data from a Microsoft Excel worksheet. When you use the Word Mail …

  4. Use mail merge in Word to send bulk email messages

    Create and send personalized email messages to everyone on your address list with mail merge.

  5. Set up a new mail merge list with Word - Microsoft Support

    If you don't have a mailing list as a source for names and addresses in a mail merge, you can create one in Word.

  6. Use mail merge to personalize letters - Microsoft Support

    Mail merge lets you create a batch of personalized letters where each letter is identical in layout, formatting, text, and graphics, except for personalized parts like the salutation.

  7. Insert mail merge fields - Microsoft Support

    Use Address Block, Greeting Line, and other merge fields to create a mail merge file from your mailing list.

  8. Print labels for your mailing list - Microsoft Support

    With your address list set up in an Excel spreadsheet you can use mail merge in Word to create mailing labels. Make sure your data is mistake free and uniformly formatted.

  9. Prepare your Excel data source for a Word mail merge

    If your data source is an existing Excel spreadsheet, then you just need to prepare the data for a mail merge. But if your data source is a tab delimited (.txt) or a comma-separated value (.csv) …

  10. Use a table or query as a mail-merge data source

    This topic explains how to start the Mail Merge Wizard from Access and create a direct link between a table or query and a Microsoft Word document. This topic covers the process for …