Previous versions of Outlook each offered an Organize pane which allowed users to quickly apply colors to messages from specific users.
This is Outlook 2007's Organize pane:
The Organize pane was removed from Outlook 2010 (and newer). Instead, users will need to create Conditional formatting rules in View Settings. While this is more work, especially for simple rules, I believe it will reduce confusion - many users had no idea that Organizer created Automatic formatting rules in the current view. When they changed views or moved items to other folders, the coloring was lost and they had no idea why. (Using the /Cleanviews switch will erase all custom views, including those created using Organize or Conditional formatting. )
Automatic formatting was renamed Conditional formatting in Outlook 2010 to better reflect what the feature does.
Create Conditional Formatting Rules in a View
To create Conditional formatting rules, you need to open the Advanced View Settings dialog. There are several ways to get to this dialog in Outlook 2010 and above, the easiest is to switch to the View tab, then click the View Settings button.
Now click the Conditional Formatting button, then click Add to create a formatting rule.
Click Font to select a font and color then click Condition to set up the rule.
Video Tutorial
Conditional Formatting Tips
To format all messages from a domain, add the domain name to the From field on the General tab. When you use the From field on the Advanced tab, Outlook looks at the Display name field, not the email address field.
Rules are tied together using the AND operator. A single rule such as From Mary OR To Mark is not possible unless you enable the QueryBuilder.
how do you do this for outlook 2016?
It done the same way as Outlook 2010 - look on the View ribbon for View Settings, then conditional formatting.
I'm working since years with conditional formatting in my outlook calendar.
I told it to my collegues and they all realized it in their outlook.
AND NOW my boss want us to use it all (over 500 outlook users), with the settings that all meetings in all calendars are coloured in different colours for our different buildings: Meetings in building are green, in building two are blue and in building three are red.
Is there a possibility to distribute the settings to ALL installations in our enterprise?
btw: We work with Outlook 2010 and Exchange 2010.
Very helpful solution BUT when I tried to add a new Conditioning Format the "Add" Button in Outlook 2010 was greyed out. Could this be because I had maxed out the number of colors applied when I was using the same mail box via Outlook 2007?
How can I reactivate the Add button so that I can apply color via rules in Outlook 2010?
Is there a limit in 2010 to the number of conditional formats you can have?
you could be at the max - do you have 27? That was the limit the last I knew. There should be an error messages that says you are at the max.
https://www.outlook-tips.net/tips/tip-877-maximum-number-of-automatic-formatting-rules/
I'm trying to color code some emails and trying to follow the instructions but when I get to Conditional Formatting itâs greyed out I canât click on it. What can I do, not sure why itâs like that.
Which version of Outlook and which view are you using? It should be available with any "list" or table style view, which is any view typically used for email. It's not available with some of the other formats (like icon, which is typically used for Notes, or timeline, which was used with the Journal.)
great tip and guide .. thanks
WOW...what a pain just to color code an individual name. 2007 was soooo easy.
Will the color coding of the email name change for previous emails or just after the conditional formatting is set.
Conditional formatting is a view, so it applies to all messages in the folder. If you change views, the formatting is lost, if you look in other folders, the formatting is lost unless you apply the view to that folder.
Thank you Diane! Your video was great! Task accomplished! :)