Google Chrome adds a title to the PDF before upload – but with “Mail-Ellen van Aken-Outlook” this is pretty generic.The screen to create or print to PDF differs per browser.This is the best option if you have one or two files you want to save.I have made a basic video, using Edge as browser. Upload to OneDrive and copy/move to SharePoint.Give the file a good name and save it to PC (The E1 license does not provide a OneDrive Client).In the next screen, select “Print to PDF” or “Microsoft Print to PDF”as the printer and hit Print.eml format (which is still an email).Įxperiments were done with IE, Edge, Chrome and Firefox browsers, and with the current and the new Outlook Online. I could not find a Flow to convert emails into documents and move them into OneDrive or SharePoint.Įventually, with lots of trials and internet search, I have been able to come up with two ways, depending if a PDF is good enough or if you really need the.If that would work, I could have added the URL to a document library in SharePoint. There were too many differences in URL between browsers and between current and new Outlook online. I could not find a consistent URL of an email.And trust me, Outlook Online works differently from the Client! There is no “Save as” in Outlook Online! What did not work? However, these options are all done with the Outlook Client, while the majority of my colleagues has an F3 license, which means they only have the online versions of Office 365. So I set about finding info and found a great post by my friend Gregory Zelfond and some others, including Microsoft themselves. I have not really done that a lot, so I could not help her immediately, but the request made sense so I promised her I would let her know. “I want to save emails from customers in our customer folders on SharePoint”, a colleague told me the other day.
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