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During this Microsoft Access 2016 training tutorial video, you will meet the trainer and know the requirements to be able to follow the course. We will also talk about which topics are not covered and for which group of users this course is designed for.
Check out some of our other training on YouTube:
Access 2016 training tutorials: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLzj7TwUeMQ3ha9zOSPu9gGqgOilSRCKyK
PowerPoint 2016 training tutorials: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLzj7TwUeMQ3jj_QkuckJNn8RddhwlQKOM
VBA for Excel tutorials: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLzj7TwUeMQ3hWRi0mgxdyWkT0QaYKuBGZ
Excel 2016 training for beginners: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLzj7TwUeMQ3jUeMoLReqNzzuKj7rdLhZ2
Project 2016 training: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLzj7TwUeMQ3gPqakrFQ8fSNPu00rsOuzu
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Hello and welcome to our course on Access 2016. My name is Toby and I’m your instructor on this course. I’m a Microsoft certified professional and my specializations include Microsoft databases and Access is a product that I’ve been using for a long time. It’s also a product that has changed significantly in the last couple of versions and it’s now much more flexible and much more powerful than it’s ever been. So I’m really looking forward to showing you how to use Access and in particular I’m looking forward to helping you to find out how Access can help you to manage some at least of the large amount of data that we all deal with nowadays in both our lives and our home lives.
So first of all who is this course for? When I designed the course I really had three groups of people in mind. First of all people who’ve never used Access before, maybe never used a database before or at least not knowingly. And very certainly who’d never designed a database or built a database before. If you like they’re the primary group of users that course is intended for and I’m really going to start Access from scratch. However, I will assume that you have a reasonable knowledge of the use of Windows software. If you’ve used components of the Microsoft Office suite, such as Word and PowerPoint and Excel, then you should have plenty of knowledge of the use of Windows software to follow this course. But I do assume that you can find your way around the Windows application. So you’ll understand things like icons and clicking and double-clicking and right-clicking and so on.
The second group of users are people who’ve used a very much older version of Access, maybe Access 2000 or 2003. For those people the current version is so different that it’ll probably be a bit of a shock. You may not even have used Access with the Ribbon interface that’s been with us now for nearly ten years. So you probably need a pretty big refresh in your knowledge of Access to be able to take full advantage of this latest version.
The third group of people are users of more recent versions of Access. And if you’re in this third group you may well have used the Ribbon before but you may not be familiar with the latest features, including features such as the creation and use of web apps, for example. Now for that third group and to some extent for the second group I will try to point out from time to time sections of the course where maybe if you’ve used Access before you don’t need to follow that section because it probably only contains material that you’re familiar with anyway. But in general terms I think it will benefit all of you to go through the whole course in sequence step by step because there may well be things that you need a refresher on or maybe when you tried to use them before you weren’t exactly clear on what was going on.
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