OneNote makes your paper notebooks, index cards, and sticky notes obsolete, taming the “paper jungle” and raising your note taking to a whole new level. Microsoft OneNote 2016 makes taking notes a paperless activity, helping you become more organized, more productive, and more persuasive with your ideas than ever before. OneNote 2016 is the perfect solution for creating, organizing, searching, and sharing notes online. It stores your notebooks in the cloud, so you can access your work from anywhere and share it with your colleagues anytime.
NOTE: This guide covers the desktop client version of OneNote 2016 for Windows. Some of the features below are not yet available in Office 2016 for Mac. To learn what’s new in Office 2016 for Mac, please visit support.office.com..
Using a touchscreen or keyboard, you can hand write or type detailed notes, jot down reminders, and draw sketches to communicate your ideas. You can also take note of digital content that you couldn’t capture on paper—such as musical recordings, screen captures, whiteboards, and screen clippings. By combining OneNote with the rest of the Microsoft Office suite, you can unlock more possibilities, including the ability to embed a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet or a Microsoft Visio diagram in your notes.
Everything you add to a OneNote notebook is immediately saved. Organizational changes within the OneNote notebook—such as a moved page or section—are also saved, so you never have to worry about losing time or data.
With OneNote, you and your teammates can work on shared notebooks simultaneously, without losing each other's changes or overwriting another's suggestions.
Access your work from your computer, tablet, or smart phone. Just download the OneNote app from the Windows Store, or go to OneNote.com to use OneNote on the web. The mobile version of OneNote is ideal for touch-first devices like the Microsoft Surface Pro 3, whereas the OneNote desktop program is designed to work with your computer.
By creating a OneNote notebook in the cloud, you can access it from other devices regardless of where you are. You can also easily share your notes with others. Your notebook is backed up automatically, so you never have to worry about losing data if your device is lost or stolen.
Use the following table to determine where to create a notebook.
OneNote notebook location |
How you plan to use your information |
Example |
Microsoft OneDrive |
You want to share personal information with trusted individuals, or you want to access your notes easily on any enabled device. |
A shared grocery list or a family vacation plan |
Microsoft OneDrive for Business |
You want to share business information for a short-term project, or share notes with a small, informal, or virtual team. |
A marketing campaign for a product launch that includes external writers and editors |
Microsoft SharePoint Online |
You want to share business information with a formal team that has an existing SharePoint Online site. |
Training materials for employees or new feature development, including brainstorming, specifications, and schedules |
The Create New Notebook dialog box appears. This example shows a SharePoint Online site. If needed, browse to the subsite or folder you want.
After you have created your notebook, you are ready to create sections and pages.
To make it easier to access your information on other devices or share it with others, you might want to move a notebook to the cloud or from one location in the cloud to another.
NOTE: Moving a notebook from your local hard drive creates a copy of the notebook in the new location. It does not delete the original notebook. If you have shared your original notebook, it is important that you tell your team to close the notebook and reopen it with the new link. You might also want to delete the original notebook.
When you create a notebook, it contains one section called New Section 1. You can rename this section, and add new sections or rename other sections to fit your project needs.
Select the down arrow to see more sections. |
Select the plus sign (+) to create a new section. |
New sections contain one untitled page. OneNote automatically inserts the date and time that the page was created. You can add and rename pages if you desire.
Select Add Page to add a new page. |
With OneNote, you can capture information by typing your notes on a page, or by using one of several creative new options.
When you are ready to start taking notes, tap or click to place the cursor anywhere below the page title, or to the right of the page title, then start typing. Notice how OneNote creates a note container for the text as you type. Note containers are visible only when you type or format text in them, or as you hover over the container.
After you finish typing your text, you can move the container anywhere on the page by selecting it, then dragging it. When you want to add a note somewhere else, just tap or click in a separate area, and start typing.
You can format the text in the note container similarly to how you format text in other Office programs.
TIP: If you prefer to write notes instead of typing them, or if you want to create a sketch, select the Draw tab.
The Send to OneNote tool is installed automatically and is available to use once you start your device. It allows you to take screen clippings, copy information from a webpage to OneNote, and create Quick Notes.
TIP: You can send a note even when OneNote is not running, by pressing the Windows logo key ( ) +N.
A Quick Note is like an electronic sticky note. Quick Notes are stored in Unfiled Notes or in the Quick Notes section at the bottom of the list of notebooks.
TIP: To keep the reminders and important information in Quick Notes visible at all times, you can pin the Quick Note. To pin a Quick Note, select the View tab, then select Always on Top.
OneNote features several add-in programs that you can use to share team notebooks, capture information from whiteboards, and print documents while viewing, searching, and formatting your OneNote content.
Office Lens turns your smart phone into a tool for capturing content from a whiteboard or a printed document. Office Lens works with your phone's camera to take images, including pictures of business cards, whiteboards, and documents. You can then save the images directly to OneNote and your camera roll. You can also save images to OneDrive as Microsoft Word documents, PDFs, or Microsoft PowerPoint presentations. After images are inserted into OneNote, you can use optical character recognition (OCR) to turn the printed text in images into text that you can copy, paste, and edit.
To install Office Lens on your smart phone, go to the app store that is associated with your mobile device.
Office Lens turns your smart phone into a tool for capturing content from a whiteboard or a printed document.
To capture content from a whiteboard or a print document:
NOTE: You might be asked to sign in to OneDrive. Office Lens only works with personal accounts, not organizational accounts.
Onetastic is a third-party add-in for OneNote that lets you view content in a calendar, create custom styles for your content, and create or download macros. Onetastic adds three groups to the Home tab: Tools, Onetastic, and Macros, as shown here.
You can download the Onetastic add-in from www.omeratay.com/onetastic/?r=download.
NOTE: Onetastic is only available for the Windows version of OneNote.
After you have created sections and pages, you might want to organize these elements by re‑ordering, combining, or deleting them in your notebook. You can also download the Onetastic add-in for OneNote to view OneNote items in a calendar view.
Use the following table to learn how to perform common organizational tasks.
Desired task |
Process |
Re-order sections, pages, or notebooks |
Drag the section, page, or notebook to a new place within the section bar, page list, or notebook list. |
Move a page to a different section |
Drag the page tab, and let the pointer rest on the destination section until the section opens. Then drag the page to the desired location among the pages of that section. |
Move a section to a different notebook |
Drag the section tab, and let the pointer rest on the notebook list until the list opens. Then drag the section to the appropriate notebook. |
Delete a section or page |
Right-click the section or page, then select Delete. If you are using a Mac, control-click the section or page, then select Delete. |
NOTE: If you need to recover a section or page that you deleted from a shared notebook, open the shared notebook, select the History tab, then select Notebook Recycle Bin.
If you are using OneNote 2016 for Mac, select the View tab, then select Deleted Notes > View Deleted Notes. Control-click on the section or page to restore it to your notebook.
TIP: You can also move or copy sections and pages by right-clicking the section or page title, then selecting Move or Copy.
You can use section groups to keep related sections together. This is useful if your notebook has more sections than will fit on your screen, or if you want to make it easier to navigate and understand a notebook’s structure.
Section groups |
You can create a page group by creating subpages under a page title. A subpage looks the same as any other page, but its page tab is indented. The visual difference makes it easier to keep information separate. In the example shown here, there are four subpages under the Project phases page.
NOTE: To promote a subpage, right-click the page tab, and then select Promote Subpage.
You can tag your notes to categorize or prioritize information. For example, if you are writing a review, you might want to highlight information with the Important tag.
When you tag a note, OneNote places an icon to the left of the tagged text or selected object.
Built-in tags include To Do, Important, Question, Remember for later, Definition, Highlight, Contact, Address, Phone Number, Idea, Website to visit, and Critical.
To add a tag:
TIP: The first nine tags at the top of the list have shortcut keys, such as Ctrl+1 for To Do, Ctrl+2 for Important, and Ctrl+3 for Question.
To easily switch from one notebook to another, you can pin your notebook list to the side of OneNote.
To view your OneNote content in a calendar format, do the following:
One of the great things about OneNote is that you can start adding notes to your notebook right away without worrying about its organization. OneNote's powerful search tools make it easy to find information in your notebooks instantly.
By default, OneNote searches all of the notes in all of your notebooks.
Select the X button to close the search results pop-up window. |
NOTE: By default, OneNote searches for text in pictures and screen clippings, in addition to text from notes. To turn these options on or off, select the File tab, select Options then select Advanced. Under Text recognition in pictures, select or clear the check box for Disable text recognition in pictures.
NOTE: By default, OneNote searches for text in pictures and screen clippings, in addition to text from notes. You can also search audio and video recordings for words. Audio and video are turned off by default. To turn these options on or off, select the File tab, select Options, then select Audio & Video. Select or clear the check box for Enable searching audio and video recordings for words.
If you share a notebook on the cloud, you and your team members can work simultaneously and track each other’s changes. If team members are viewing the shared notebook while you are typing, your notes will automatically appear on their screen. Likewise, their notes will appear on your screen. The notes are updated every few minutes, so you can see changes in near real time. You and your team members can edit the same paragraph of notes on the same page without overriding each other’s notes.
You can share the notebook with individuals, or within a meeting.
You can also share a notebook from the cloud without opening the notebook. From OneDrive, OneDrive for Business, or SharePoint Online:
NOTE: If your team members do not have access to your SharePoint Online site, they will not be able to see the shared notebook. You cannot share just a section group, section, or page. You must share the entire notebook. However, you can assign a password to a section to control access to it.
TIP: To share the contents of a specific page, on the Home tab, select Email Page. This lets you email a snapshot of the page.
After you have shared a notebook, you can begin working on it with your team. You can easily see each other’s changes because they appear in bold and the initials of the person who made each change will appear next to it. You can also use the History tab for a more comprehensive view of changes.
Use the History tab to determine who has made changes and the content of those changes.
The following table describes the buttons on the History tab.
Use this button |
To do this |
Next Unread |
Move to the next unread section in the notebook. If the Next Unread button is not available, there are no unread notes. |
Mark as Read |
Mark a section that you have already read (to narrow down unread content). |
Recent Edits |
Specify a time period to review recent edits. |
Find by Author |
Search for changes by a specific author. |
Hide Authors |
Display or hide author initials. |
Page Versions |
View a previous version of a page (select the page tab to see a list of versions). |
Notebook Recycle Bin |
Restore a page or section that has been deleted from a shared notebook. |
Taking notes in an online meeting
OneNote is fully integrated with Microsoft Outlook and Skype for Business, so you can easily take notes and share them with others.
TIP: If you want to take notes in a meeting, but you do not need to share them, you can select the Home tab then select Meeting Details.
OneNote creates a page that is linked to your Outlook appointment, which allows you to keep the meeting details and your notes from the meeting together.
OneNote creates a page that is linked to your Skype for Business conversation, so you and other participants can contribute notes at the same time.
OneNote on the Go
With OneNote 2016, you are not restricted to one place or one device when you need to get work done. For example, you can create a notebook for meeting notes on a desktop or laptop computer and save it to OneDrive for Business. You can then go outside to work within the notebook using OneNote on your phone, and use your finger or a stylus to take notes, or even use Cortana to take notes on your Windows Phone. You can also share the notebook with a colleague, and each of you can co-author meeting notes—you can use your phone and your colleague can use a tablet. For more information on OneNote for your mobile device, visit support.office.com/en-us/onenote.
Read more: Choosing a SharePoint Intranet to Transform Your Team Productivity.