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Outlook Blog
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Update on Focused Inbox and our plans for Clutter

Jon Orton's avatar
Jon Orton
Iron Contributor
Dec 12, 2017

Update: 12/12/2019

We have received feedback from our customers and in response we are going to postpone the retirement of Clutter at this time.

Focused Inbox is where we will continue focusing our development efforts and we encourage you to transition your users for the best experience. Customers can continue to use Clutter, but we will not be investing in it further.

 

Original Blog post: 12/12/2017

In July 2016 we announced that Focused Inbox, a new feature in Outlook that helps you cut through the noise of email to focus on what matters most, would be coming to Office 365 customers. Focused Inbox first rolled out to customers who use modern authentication, and earlier this month we added support for basic authentication. This means that Focused Inbox is now available to all Office 365 customers on the Monthly Channel of Office 365 ProPlus. If you aren’t seeing it yet, be sure your Outlook version is updated to build 16.0.8730 Version 1711 or greater. Focused Inbox will be available to customers on the Semi-Annual Channel in the March 2018 Semi-Annual Targeted release, and the July 2018 Semi-Annual release, according to that channel’s standard schedule.

 

With Focused Inbox now rolled out, we’d like to share more about our plans for Clutter.  As we mentioned in July, Focused Inbox is the long-term replacement for Clutter.  It carries forward Clutter’s capabilities but removes the need to visit a separate folder to check your less-actionable messages.  Because Clutter and Focused Inbox use the same algorithms for sorting messages, there are no changes to how email is classified, just a better user experience.

 

We’ll continue to make Clutter available to Office 365 customers until January 31, 2020.  To prepare for Clutter’s eventual retirement, we’ve turned the feature off by default for new users.  It’s also deactivated for those with extremely low usage (less than 12 emails per month being moved to the Clutter folder), however they can re-enable Clutter at any time, if desired.

 

If your organization is using Clutter today, the process for transitioning to Focused Inbox depends on what version of Outlook you are using. 

 

Subscription version of Outlook (Outlook 2016 as part of Office 365 ProPlus or Office 365 Business): As users in your organization update Outlook to the latest version, those who currently use Clutter will be prompted to give Focused Inbox a try.  If they decide to switch, Clutter will be turned off automatically for that user—no administrator action is required.  If they don’t switch, messages will continue to move to the Clutter folder until the January 2020 end of service date arrives.  As an administrator you can also activate Focused Inbox for your whole organization rather than giving individual users the choice.  See the resources at the end of this post for details.


Perpetual version of Outlook (Outlook 2016 MSI or earlier version): These versions of Outlook do not support Focused Inbox. To transition from Clutter to Focused Inbox, you can upgrade to Office 365 ProPlus (available today) or Outlook 2019, which is scheduled to be released in the second half of 2018 and will include support for Focused Inbox. If you don’t upgrade Outlook before January 2020, messages will stop being moved to the Clutter folder, and will revert to being placed in the inbox.    

 

For more information and FAQs, including how to manage Focused Inbox and Clutter for your organization, please refer to these resources:
 
Blog: Outlook helps you focus on what matters to you
Blog: Managing Focused Inbox in Office 365 and Outlook
Help article: Configure Focused Inbox for everyone in your organization (includes content on configuring Clutter options for your organization)

 

Updated Dec 12, 2019
Version 2.0

62 Comments

  • Nick Kruger's avatar
    Nick Kruger
    Brass Contributor

    While in large part this just seems like a way to relabel things I've already been using and move them around on me with no real-life benefit, it actually seems like depending on how this is implemented it can actually be a step backwards.  While moving things into the "Clutter" folder, similar to the Junk folder, completely clears these items from my Inbox, this new Focused inbox seems to just be a filtered view of my inbox.  The issue here, is that with Clutter, the messages were out of sight and out of the way when viewed from my iPhone / android devices regardless of email client.  From what I can tell, if I enable this "feature" and disable clutter, I will now be once again bombarded with these less important emails in my inbox when viewed from native clients on my portable devices and anywhere else that I sync my email except for through Outlook clients.  The problem here is that I have no interest in using the Outlook app on most of my devices.  The built in calendar, email and contacts functionality in most modern Android and iPhones is still easier to use and more built-in feeling on devices than the Outlook client, and is also still necessary for full account integration into features like Siri, Google Assistant, and other built in functions of these phones.  In order to use the Focused inbox, while still retaining these functions, I would have to have my account not only synced to the Outlook app, but still also synced to the native apps on the device.  For many, I feel like this is going to be a pain and really provide little benefit especially considering I LOVE the clutter function, and this is a step backwards with how I use my accounts.  I can't be the only one.

  • Cian Allner's avatar
    Cian Allner
    Silver Contributor

    Thanks for the update Jon, this is really helpful information that will help customers plan ahead.  Also thanks for keeping the Office Blog post up-to-date with the latest info as well.