In-Depth
Word 2007: Not Exactly a Must-Have
Some sing its praises, but compatibility problems and the new interface leave others cold.
Microsoft rolled out Office 2007 with huge fanfare last fall. So far, though,
most users can only come up with one or two new features they like. For most,
those features fall short of convincing them to upgrade to the new version.
For one thing, Word 2007 uses the entirely new ribbon interface. Power users
say it takes too much time and patience to learn. Couple that with the fact
that its new format makes it difficult to share documents with those using earlier
versions of Word, and most say they'll wait to upgrade.
"People will get used to the new interface, but at major efforts in time,
training and cost," says Mike McCullough, director of systems at Cooling
Systems Technologies (CST) Inc., a parts manufacturing company in Mount Carmel,
Ill.
When McCullough switched one of his WordPerfect users over to Word 2003 years
ago, the interfaces were similar and she got up to speed fairly quickly. When
it came time to move her from 2003 to 2007, he quickly ran into problems. "I
might as well of hit her over the head with a bat," he says. "I could
see anger and frustration."
He expects his experience won't be unique. "Companies are spending money
just getting the new [2007] product in the first place, but now you have to
pay someone to sit there and show people how to use it," he says. "And
not everyone learns at the same speed. Even after that, it's a lot of hand-holding
to get people to learn new things."
The new interface takes away from a major selling factor for Word -- its ease
of use. "That's why everyone uses Word -- because everyone knows exactly
where everything is," says Phil Collett, IT manager at Citrus Motors, a
car dealership in Ontario, Calif. "But this interface is such a shock,
it's like having to learn a whole new program. In fact, if people were looking
to go to something open source, like StarOffice or OpenOffice, this would be
the perfect time. It's no different than learning the new Word."
McCullough agrees. "There are 100 million users who understand the old
interface. And now they introduce a brand new interface for what, 10 people?"
he says. "It's not worth it."
What's
New in Word 2007 |
Though not enough
to inspire them to upgrade, readers like these key new features
of Word 2007 the best:
• Preview: The ability to hover the mouse
over selected text and view font changes and style changes
is a definite plus, say readers. "Preview is amazing,"
says Steve Hohman, IT director for Gray Information Solutions
Inc. "I can hover over the style and it will change what
I've highlighted before I even click to save it."
• Format painter: Instead of going to
a different menu item or toolbar, every format option is within
the ribbon. "All those little tools you normally use
are right there, including formatting for your fonts, your
size, your format painter, bold, italic and underline,"
Hohman says. "It's all there, instead of having to jump
back up the top and take it off the toolbar. It's much faster."
• Grammar and spell check: Both of these
features are now much more unobtrusive, which makes them more
user-friendly, says Mike McCullough, director of systems at
Cooling Systems Technologies Inc. Hohman says the spell check
is especially improved because it can more easily discern
typing mistakes, and the grammar check is more useful. "Now,
it's also taking a look at context to see where maybe you'd
be better off using this word instead of that one," he
says. "It's more helpful." -J.C.
|
|
|
New and Improved
Other readers feel it's worth taking the time to learn the new interface. Once
you do, they say, it actually makes creating professional-looking documents
much easier for the average user.
Steve Hohman, IT director for Gray Information Solutions Inc. in Spring Hill,
Fla., likes 2007's ribbon interface because it makes features that he wasn't
even aware existed in 2003 easier to find and use. "The reference ribbon
is amazing," he says, noting that he writes a lot of research papers and
he can use that to create source references and easily add citations. "I
go into my paper, click one button and say insert citation," he says. "It
goes right into the document in the right format. I can do the same thing to
insert a footnote or insert an endnote."
The ribbon interface also makes it easier for him to use cross-references to
link a table of contents or a table of figures with references in a document.
"If I move a figure inside the document and it goes from page five to six,
that automatically updates in the table of contents," he says. "It
makes managing your references and managing your tables and indexes much easier.
These are all things you probably could do in 2003, but you didn't see it because
it wasn't in front of your face on a ribbon."
Readers also like Word 2007's SmartArt graphics. This capability helps them
create tables and graphics within Word. In the past, Hohman says he would create
shapes and figures in Visio, then import them into Word. "They would come
over well, but they didn't format or match the style I was using in my document,"
he says. With SmartArt, Hohman says he just has to create the diagrams in Word
and everything matches.
"SmartArt is especially great if you're doing presentations, putting together
a proposal or some sort of document that would benefit from any type of chart
or diagram," he says. "It looks so professional and it's so easy to
put in that it's just a matter of picking what shape looks best to you and putting
in the text. Then you can change the colors, the 3-D look, rotate it and plant
it right where you want. It's easy."
Format Formalities
The standard Word 2007 file format is no longer the well-known .DOC format.
It's now the new XML-based .DOCX format. The change makes it difficult to collaborate
and share documents with users of earlier versions of Word, but readers see
how the new format could ease document sharing in the future.
In order to share documents with 2003 users, 2007 users must use a "Save
As" command instead of a simple "Save." This adds an extra step
to sharing documents with earlier versions. "It's a pain to downgrade and
save as 2003," Collett says. "You have to teach people on 2007 to
do that so people with earlier versions can use it. Sometimes people forget."
Others agree and note that some 2007 functionality is lost during the conversion
for earlier Word versions. "I do a lot of schoolwork in 2007, but school
uses 2003 and I have to down-convert my documents to 2003," Collett says.
"One thing I lose when I do that is SmartArt. I may not be able to adjust
it or change the shape or color of the object."
CST's McCullough says he downloaded a free Compatibility Pack program from
Microsoft's Web site that lets 2003 users save their documents in 2007 format.
"It upgrades 2003 to 2007 file formats, so I can actually continue to use
2003 and interchange my documents with 2007," McCullough says. "It
saves everything in the new format."
It's a bit slower than a regular 2003 save, he says. "But what's neat
is that it's interchangeable, so if you want to maintain this new .DOCX standard,
you don't need to buy 2007 for everyone."
McCullough says he's interested in the new XML format for its promise of easy
reuse. For example, if someone embeds a .JPG image within a Word 2007 document,
you can easily share and reuse that image. It retains its .JPG format and isn't
locked within the Word document.
"Now we can pull these pictures out of documents for whatever purposes
and reuse them," he says. It also makes it easier to conduct searches on
individual portions of a Word document. "We can do much improved searches
on text within documents than we've ever been able to do before," he says.
"I can see why Microsoft did that."
One feature that some users consider reason enough to switch is Word 2007's
ability to save documents as PDFs. This is another key method of easing document
sharing. To use the PDF feature, download a free add-in from Microsoft's Web
site. Once you've downloaded and installed the add-in, it does work well.
"How many of us paid good money for a PDF converter?" says Hohman.
"Now, you can download this for free and save as a PDF. And there are no
conversion errors I've found yet. I've converted documents with formulas, equations
and it all comes over nice and clear."
Slow Change
Even a fan of Word 2007 like Hohman admits that it will be some time before
everyone makes the change. This is especially true since most of his firm's
customers are still on Word 2003. "A lot of our clients can't upgrade because
they're being told that their applications can't support 2007 yet," he
says.
For now, most are trying out the new Word on their own PC, but not yet rolling
it out companywide.
More Information
To download a free Compatibility Pack program from Microsoft that lets 2003
users save their documents in 2007 format, go
here.
To use the PDF feature, you have to download a free add-in from Microsoft (see
here).
About the Author
Joanne Cummings is principal writer and editor for Cummings Ltd., a freelance editorial firm based in North Andover, Mass.