A Quick Glance

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    Getting a certification always add extra advantage and helps in getting a hike in salary

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    Opportunity of career advancement Training course, Fulfillment of training requirements and Proof of professional achievement

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    Enhance productivity at work & Fast track your career

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    Learn to use and apply MS Publisher by Accredited Microsoft partner

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    Flexible dates to suit your timetable

Microsoft Publisher 2016 is a desktop publishing, this application from Microsoft, opposing from Microsoft Word in that the stress is placed on page layout and design rather than text composition and proofing.

The Microsoft Publisher 2016 is included in latest editions of MS Office 2016, shows that Microsoft is focusing on this application as an easy-to-use and less classy alternative to the "heavyweights" with a focus on the small business market where practices do not have dedicated design professionals available to make marketing things and other documents. However, it has a relatively low share of the desktop publishing market, which is dominated by Adobe InDesign and QuarkXPress.

Who should take this course

  • Graduates
  • Office Personnel
  • Office Managers
  • Small Business Owners
  • Anyone wanting to learn Publisher
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Prerequisites

No Prerequisites are required to attend this course.

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What Will You Learn

  • Get familiar with the Publisher 2016 environment and start working on a publication
  • Format graphics in a publication
  • Prepare a book for distribution
  • Editing of the contents of a publication
  • Work with graphics in a publication
  • How to add good families and other page fundamentals
  • How to create text boxes and add text
  • How to work with stencils
  • Formatting of a text
  • How to use colour correction and other photo editing tools for your writing
  • How to add, resize, rotate, and group objects
  • How to add tables to publications
  • Modifying the structure and layout of a publication
  • How to create a product log using Publisher 2016
  • How to create bookmarks and hyperlinks
  • How to set up pages so creating books is easy
  • Add content to a publication
  • Format text and paragraphs in a publication
  • Manage text in a publication
  • How to format text and objects to customise the look of your publication
  • How to add images, shapes, and graphics to publications
  • How to share your writing, as well as how to prepare it for the printer
  • Make a book for printing and sharing
  • Perform basic tasks in the Microsoft Publisher edge
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What's included

  Course Overview

MS Office Publisher 2016 is a desktop publication software application adept at producing certificates, greeting cards, and other printed publications. Publisher includes an extensive collection of templates that provide an excellent way to start a new magazine. The editor allows a wide selection of "building blocks" that can be dragged into your documents, helping you to create page fundamentals such as newsletter sidebars, borders and calendars.

MS Publisher merges online sharing and mail merge structures, which is useful when you need to send publications to a list of clients, and it's likely to export books as PDF documents or HTML web pages. With the help of user-friendly border, Publisher makes it simple to create and edit publications.

SHORTCUTS OF MS PUBLISHER 2016

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  Course Content

Getting Started

  • Laying out a New Publication
  • Saving, Closing and Opening a Publication
  • Publications with more than one page
  • Using Help
  • Using a Template
  • The Publisher Window
  • Using the Zoom Tool
  • Printing
  • Navigate the Interface
  • Customise the Publisher Interface
  • Create a Publication

Creating a New Publication

  • The Publisher Desktop
  • Navigating Around Publication
  • The Save Reminder

Working with a Publication

  • Adding Content to Your Publication
  • Adding & Deleting Pages
  • Moving & Sizing Objects
  • Deleting Objects
  • Modifying the Page Setup
  • Working with the Publication Background

Working with Text Frames

  • Adding & Manipulating Text Settings
  • Importing Text
  • Spell Checker/ Search and Replace
  • Alignment
  • Bullet Points & Numbering
  • Moving, Copying & Deleting Text
  • Editing Articles in Word
  • Fonts & Other Text Effects
  • Connecting & Disconnecting Frames

Adding Visuals

  • Implanting a Picture from a File & Moving and Sizing Images
  • Cropping a Picture
  • Inserting a Picture Frame & the Clip Art Gallery

Printing

  • Modifying the Printer Setup & Printing

Innovative Text Techniques

  • Fancy First Letters
  • Painting Arrangements
  • Styles
  • Adding Decorated Backgrounds
  • Working with Special Types and Controlling Line & Character Spacing
  • Changing the Defaults for Text Frames
  • Controlling The Defaults for Text Frames

Advanced Graphic Techniques

  • Adding Pictures Not in the Gallery
  • Scaling Pictures
  • Re-colouring Pictures
  • Rotating Pictures
  • Adding Borders & Shadows
  • Adding Pictures from the Internet
  • Customising the Clip Art Gallery

Special Effects

  • Borders & Border Art
  • Inserting, Moving, Resizing, Patterns & Gradients

Advanced Layout Techniques

  • Working With the Ruler
  • Working with Ruler & Layout Guides
  • Aligning Objects
  • Layering Objects
  • Nudging & Grouping Objects

Word Art

  • Creating Word Art & Changing Text Formatting
  • Shaping Options, Character Spacing & Special Effects
  • Editing a Word Art Object

The Design Gallery

  • Inserting a Design Gallery Object
  • Replacing Selected Objects
  • Applying Attributes from a Design Gallery Object
  • Customising the Design Gallery

Tables

  • Adding a Table
  • Adding & Modifying Cells
  • Formatting Table Data

Formatting Text and Paragraphs in a Publication

  • Format Text
  • Form Paragraphs
  • Apply Schemes

Adding Content to a Publication

  • Add Text to a Publication
  • Add Pages and Image Placeholders to a Publication
  • Control the Display of Content in Text Boxes
  • Use Building Blocks to a Publication

Managing Text in a Publication

  • Edit Text in a Publication
  • Work with Tables
  • Insert Symbols and Special Characters

Preparing a Publication for Sharing and Printing

  • Check the Design of a Publication
  • Save a Publication in Different Formats
  • Print a Publication
  • Share a Publication

Working with Graphics in a Publication

  • Add Graphics to a Publication
  • Customise the Appearance of Pictures

Working from a Blank Page

  • Opening a Blank Publication
  • The Snap Command
  • Layout and Ruler Guides
  • Working with Objects
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Microsoft Publisher 2016 Introduction Enquiry

 

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Reach us at +44 1344 961530 or info@pentagonit.co.uk for more information.

About Burton Upon Trent

Burton upon Trent is a town on the stream Trent in East Staffordshire. It was having a populance of 72,299 in 2011. Burton is well known for preparing beer. The town previously produced around Burton Abbey. Burton Bridge was also the site of two fights, in 1322 when Edward II overwhelmed the rebel Earl of Lancaster and 1643 when royalists apprehended the town during the First English Civil War. William Lord Paget and his descendants were responsible for dispersal of the manor house within the grounds of abbey and facilitating the delay of the River Trent Navigation to Burton. Burton developed as a busy market town by the early modern period.

Government:

Burton is the managerial centre for the area of East Staffordshire and forms part of the Burton electorate. The local Member of Assembly is the Traditional Party's Andrew Griffiths, who has indicated the Burton electorate since May 2010. The Traditionalists detached the seat from Labor in the 2010 general election with an 8.7% swing.

In 1978 it was combined as a municipal borough. The combined area was divided between the counties of Staffordshire and Derbyshire - the Local Government Act 1888 combined the total of the area in Staffordshire, including the former Derbyshire parishes of Stapenhill and Winshill. It developed a county borough in 1901, having touched the 50,000 population obligatory.

It never significantly exceeded the population of 50,000, and at a population of 50,201 in the 1971 survey was the smallest county area in England after Canterbury. The Local Government Commission for England optional in the 1960s that it be relegated to a non-county borough within Staffordshire, but this was not applied.

Geography:

It is nearly 109 miles north-west of London, approx. 30 miles to northeast of Birmingham, which is  the UK's second largest city and about 23 miles east of the county town Stafford. It is located at the eastern part of the county of Staffordshire; it's an against the course of the River Trent creating part of the county boundary. 

Demography:

The total population of town is  43,784 in the 2001 Survey. Winshill and Stapenhill were treated distinctly and together had a additional population of 21,985. According to the 2001 survey, 71% of the town's population classify themselves as Christian, 12% as a nonbeliever or doubting and 8.5% Muslim. In the 2011 census shows that the population of the town is 72,299.

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