 Holly asks, is there any way to use multiple templates inside one email in Outlook? I often have repetitive content in emails but not always the same parts. For example, I may have several different intros or sign-offs that I use given different circumstances and same with content, but I often need to mix these up. I can't see how to do this using templates, so not sure if I can. I would like to use something simple like the magical Chrome extension, but sadly it doesn't work in Outlook. If it can't be done using templates, does anyone have any other ideas? There's a magical Chrome extension? I'm not going to go into that. Does it actually do magic? I know how to go search for that for the phrase magical Chrome extension. It's not bringing up what you think. No, but to answer this one, you would maybe start with one template. What is the core that you actually need? Then you move over and do quick parts or don't even use a template. Just start building quick parts. If you actually open up a new email, for example, and on the Insert tab, you've actually got what's called quick parts. In the back end of all of Office is quick parts. When we put in a header or a footer or a cover page or anything along those lines, it's all built off the back end, which is quick parts. There's a file that sits in the back end of Office. What you can do is you can choose your content. Whatever your content is, you can choose your content, and then go to your quick parts and then say that selection to a quick parts gallery. Now, you can either keep it in quick parts or you could be dropping it into anything else, like maybe you're dropping it into a table because you can do tables or all kind of quick parts and you can go, which gallery do you want it to actually drop from? If you've got just some raw content that you need to add in again and again, save it into just your standard quick part gallery. With the names, it'll go in alphabetical order. You can give it a name. There's keyboard shortcuts to type in the name and then just press Enter and it will actually just drop it in. I've built a lot of documents off the back of quick parts. You've got your auto text, which is there, but I would say build off the back of quick parts. That will actually support you dropping in a multitude of different content really quickly and easily, and that's just the out-of-the-box solution. I mean, you can get a course or other parties that go on top to be able to do, but I think if you're trying to stick to standards, then either build your template and then quick parts to drop in or just build all of the little parts in quick parts and don't even bother with the templates. The only thing I was going to add to this is I know that a lot of the CRM platforms and I've used both Dynamics and Salesforce, you have the ability to go and do something similar to that depending on, but it's been so long since I've built and used those over 10 years, a little bit longer for Dynamics. Sorry, Dynamics folks, it's been a while since I've used Dynamics, but we did something very similar for sales and marketing purposes. We had the standardized templates, but then you would mix and match those things. So I mean, quick parts haven't used that in a while either, but that is a great solution for this. I'm going to say thank you, Christie, because you just solved a problem for me because I didn't even think about that. Thank you. You're welcome. Sometimes the simple things can have the most effect. I've actually built for an organization they wanted to be able to build a cookbooks of all the different types and people could custom order all these cookbooks. So we actually off the back in with Word built it where you had each of the recipes and then all of the other tools that you might need and the picture that goes with it and the table of contents and the cover page, all the different cover page and they could custom make all these different types of cookbooks, all of the back at Quick Parts. And we had this one master document and it was like, what are all the codes for them all to just drop in and they could literally build a custom cookbook in the space of two or three minutes to go out to the printer. Yeah, it was it was some fun. I had some fun building that for a client.