lilyhart66
Member
Yes, for hundreds of MSG files, batch conversion is the better choice. Manual saving can work for a few emails but it becomes slow when attachments and email headers are important.
Why this matters:
Project and client emails usually need sender, receiver, date, subject, body formatting and attachments in readable form. Missing any of these can create problems during sharing or record keeping.
Suggested method:
You can try Softaken MSG to PDF Converter for this work. I choose this tool because it seamlessly converts multiple Outlook MSG Files to PDF. It supports bulk MSG to PDF conversion and keeps email formatting, properties and attachments. It also saves attachments in a separate folder, so they are easy to check after conversion. Outlook and Adobe Acrobat are not needed.
Useful tip:
Test the free demo on a small MSG folder first and compare the PDF output with the original emails before converting all files.
Why this matters:
Project and client emails usually need sender, receiver, date, subject, body formatting and attachments in readable form. Missing any of these can create problems during sharing or record keeping.
Suggested method:
You can try Softaken MSG to PDF Converter for this work. I choose this tool because it seamlessly converts multiple Outlook MSG Files to PDF. It supports bulk MSG to PDF conversion and keeps email formatting, properties and attachments. It also saves attachments in a separate folder, so they are easy to check after conversion. Outlook and Adobe Acrobat are not needed.
Useful tip:
Test the free demo on a small MSG folder first and compare the PDF output with the original emails before converting all files.