Office 2016


What's new and improved in Office 2016 for Office 365

As an Office 365 subscriber, you regularly get new and improved features. Take a look below to see what's available to you today and what's coming. Not an Office 365 subscriber but using Office 2016? Find out what's available in your version. Need a subscription? Check out your options.
If you're new to Office or new to an app, check out the Office 2016 Quick Start Guides. If you want to find out why you should upgrade to Office 2016, watch this video.
Visit the Office Training Center to learn about using Office apps and services. Dozens of free courses—most with video—are available for both the business and home user. You’ll also find new courses made in partnership with LinkedIn Learning and an offer to can get unlimited access to 4,000+ video courses library.
Need to install Office 2016? If you're an Office 365 Home, Personal, or University subscriber, learn more about how to upgrade to Office 2016. If you're an Office 365 for Business subscriber, learn more about how to get the new Office 2016 apps.
Interested in being one of the first people to try out new features and functionality? If you're an Office 365 Home, Personal, or University subscriber, you can choose to become an Office Insider.
Interested in learning more about what is available in Office 2016 for Mac? Check out What's new and improved in Office 2016 for Mac.


Is it better to get Office 365 or Office 2013?
www.office.com/setup Call 1-855-649-4951


While there are many similarities between the 2013 and 365 strands of the Office family, it is Office 2013 that should be regarded as the natural successor to Office 2010. This is software in the traditional sense. You buy it for a one-time fee, install it, own it; it’s yours. As with most software, you are entitled to install Office 2013 on one computer (unless you buy more than one copy, that is) and as has been the case in the past, there are several versions available which include different Office programs.

There is a strong focus on online work, with all areas of Office including collaboration, sharing or cloud options – files can be saved directly to SkyDrive, for instance. Many of the changes are quite cosmetic, with Word gaining a new reading mode and Outlook benefiting from a much cleaner look that ever before. Social networking integration is also included, as one might expect.
Excel users can take advantage of improved pivot tables as well as suggestions for charts that are best suited to different types of data. There are also time-saving touches such as Flash Fill which aims to speed up data entry by noticing lists and patterns in the data you enter and autofilling for you.

Office 365

In many respects, the big news for Office is Office 365– this is where the big changes are to be found. Rather than buying software to keep, here you pay a monthly or annual subscription; essentially renting the software.
But this is far from being the only difference. While Office 2013 can only be installed on one computer, Office 365 can be used on up to five PCs (and Macs) for one price.

If you like this approach to software, Office 365 can be yours for $9.99 per month or $99.99 per year. Whether you are working with one PC or five, you pay the same price, so this is great option for households with several computers.
There’s a strong online focus with Office 365 and a subscription also includes 20GB of SkyDrive storage and, perhaps unsurprisingly following Microsoft’s acquisition of Skype, 60 minutes of Skype calls per month.

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