Microsoft Outlook and Gmail have many similar features and important differences. This article compares the Outlook computer app to Gmail on the web and highlights the benefits of switching to Gmail.
On this page
- Why switch to Gmail?
- What you'll do differently in Gmail
- Feature differences at a glance
- Different names for similar features
- Collaborate & use other apps with Gmail
What you'll do differently in Gmail
When you switch to Gmail, it's natural to want to preserve your existing workflows. And while you can often replicate Outlook workflows in Gmail, switching is a great time to explore new ways of working.
Use the best practices and tips below to learn what you'll do differently when you switch to Gmail.
Outlook workflow | Gmail best practices & tips |
---|---|
Collaborate on copies of documents—Send copies to colleagues as email attachments. | Work together on the same document—Share Google Docs, Sheets, and Slides, update sharing permissions, and reply to comments without leaving Gmail. Learn more |
Sort by sender—Use the search bar or the filter menu in your inbox. | Find messages by searching—Search using advanced search criteria, chips, and apps search overlay. Learn more |
Mark messages you send as important—Select the high importance marker. | Use smarter subjects—Highlight the message's importance in the subject field. Learn more |
Format text in email—Apply text formats in the message window. | Use Google Docs for special text formats—Apply commonly used text formats in the message window. For advanced formatting options or tables, edit and send email from Google Docs. Learn more |
Add voting buttons to a message—Take a poll through email. | Use Google Forms for surveys—Take a poll using Google Forms. Learn more |
Use flags as followup-reminders—Use flags to track important messages you receive. | Star or snooze important messages—Star, snooze, or mark messages you receive as important. Learn more |
Group email—Use folders, rules, and categories. | Filter & label email—Use labels and search filters (Gmail doesn't use folders). You can drag messages into labels, similar to the way you drag items into folders. Learn more |
Post messages in folders—Send informational messages to folders in your account. | Send messages to yourself—Then apply labels to the messages or mark them as important. Learn more |
Use Public Folders—Share information within your organization. | Use Google Drive—Share files and folders in Google Drive. Learn more at the Docs editors Help Center |
Use a shared mailbox—Let multiple people send messages from a single email address. | Delegate an email account—Let multiple people use a single email account, or create a Collaborative Inbox. Learn more at the Gmail Help Center |
Use AutoArchive & Clean Sweep—Set up rules to periodically move messages from your inbox to the Outlook Archive file. | Use filters to automatically archive messages—Archive messages, or set up filters to automatically move messages to the archive. No need to schedule rules to run at regular intervals. After you archive messages, you can still find them under the label, All Mail. Learn more |
Feature differences at a glance
This section highlights differences between Outlook and Gmail features.
Feature or task | Outlook (desktop) | Gmail (web) |
---|---|---|
Open your email |
Open Outlook on your computer.
|
Go to gmail.com in any browser. Learn more |
Write email | Use grammar and spelling checkers. | Get grammar, spelling, and personalized writing suggestions. Learn more |
Save drafts | Click Home |
Click Compose. Drafts are saved automatically. To find a draft, go to the label named Drafts. Learn more |
Attach an email to an email | In the message window, insert an Outlook item, or drag an item into a message. | Forward a message as an attachment, or drag a message into another message. Learn more |
Save attachments | Save attachments to your computer. | Upload attachments to Google Drive. Learn more |
View individual messages or conversation threads | Arrange by conversation or sender. Scroll to view all messages or conversations (desktop view). | Use quick settings to change conversation view. View up to 100 messages or conversations per screen (web view). Learn more |
Reply to email | On the ribbon, click Reply. | In the message, click Reply. For fast replies, use Smart Reply suggestions. Learn more |
Respond directly to the content of a previous email | In your reply, write, "see my response inline below." Then type into the previous message. | Copy text from the previous message into your reply, and apply the quote format. Then enter your response. Learn more |
Add shortcuts to settings | Customize settings on the ribbon. | Add custom keyboard shortcuts for things you do frequently. Learn more |
Different names for similar features
Outlook and Gmail sometimes use different names for similar features. Use this table to map the differences.
Outlook | Gmail |
Folders | Labels |
Rules | Filters |
New Email | Compose |
Delay Delivery | Schedule send |
Message Recall | Undo Send |
Mail merge | Mail merge |
Encrypt email | Confidential mode |
Alerts | Notifications |
Quick parts | Email templates |
Ignore conversations | Mute conversations |
Junk | Spam |
Deleted Items | Trash |
Collaborate & use other apps with Gmail
Gmail lets you move from one communication stream to another without changing your context.
Task | How you do it in Gmail (web) |
---|---|
Work with colleagues using Outlook | Use Outlook and Gmail together |
Edit an email with colleagues | Work together on email content in a Google Doc |
Chat with colleagues and share content in Spaces | Use Google Chat in Gmail |
Make it easier to contact colleagues | Add people to your Google Contacts |
Start video meetings and make voice calls | Use Google Meet in Gmail |
Schedule meetings and appointments | Use the Google Calendar sidebar in Gmail |
Create a task from an email | Drag an email to Google Tasks |
Create notes from an email | Save an email to Google Keep |
Take a poll | Send a Google Forms survey |
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