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My Microsoft Word Account

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Read and edit documents attached to emails, collaborate with your team and bring your office wherever you go with Microsoft Word. The Word app from Microsoft lets you create, read, edit, and share your files quickly and easily. Word introduces a mobile PDF reader for your phone. Edit documents and read PDFs or e-books while traveling, before bedtime, or wherever you want. Create documents. Read and edit documents attached to emails, collaborate with your team and bring your office wherever you go with Microsoft Word. The Word app from Microsoft lets you create, read, edit, and share your files quickly and easily. Word introduces a mobile PDF reader for your phone. Edit documents and read PDFs or e-books while traveling, before bedtime, or wherever you want. Find your Microsoft account using your security information: Look up your usernameusing your security contact phone number or email address. Request a security codeto be sent to the phone number or email you used. Enter the code and select Next. If you don't already have a Microsoft account, you can go to the Creating a Microsoft Account lesson in our Microsoft Account tutorial. To sign in to Office 2013: When you use Office for the first time, it will ask you to sign in to your Microsoft account. However, if you don't sign in.

How to unlock your Microsoft account

To gain access to a locked Microsoft account:

  1. Login at account.microsoft.com.
  2. Follow the prompts to get a security code sent to your mobile device.
  3. Enter the security code into the webpage prompt.
  4. Reset your password.

Applies to All Windows 10 Versions

Your Microsoft account can become locked if there's a security issue or you enter an incorrect password too many times. Don't fret though, as recovery is a simple procedure which should take only a minute to complete.

First, login to your Microsoft account at account.microsoft.com. You will be informed that your account is locked, which is to be expected at this stage.

Use the form on the page to enter a phone number. This must be capable of receiving SMS messages. Microsoft will send a unique security code to the number.

Once you've got the code, enter it into the form on the webpage to unlock your account. You'll now need to change your password. It can't be the same as your previous password. This is required to ensure third-party actors are locked out of your account, if it was suspicious activity that caused the lock to be enforced.

Once you've reset your password, you should get back into your account. Remember to enter the new password on all your devices – this includes Windows 10 PCs and any apps which use your Microsoft account, such as Outlook and Skype.

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Lesson 2: Working with Your Microsoft Account and OneDrive

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Working with your Microsoft Account and OneDrive

Signing in to a Microsoft account

Many of the new features in Office 2013 are geared toward saving and sharing files online. To use these features, you'll need to get a free Microsoft account (previously called a Windows Live ID) if you don't already have one. You can then log in to your Microsoft account to access your OneDrive, which is an online storage space for your documents and other files.

How To Find My Microsoft Word Account

Benefits of using a Microsoft account

Here are a few of the things you'll be able to do with your Microsoft account:

Word
  • Access your files anywhere: You can save files to your OneDrive, so you'll be able to access them from any computer that has an internet connection. This also helps to keep your files safe if anything happens to your computer.
  • Edit documents in your web browser: If you're using a computer that doesn't have Microsoft Office, you can use Office Online (previously known as Office Web Apps) to edit documents in your browser for free. Office Online includes simplified versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote.
  • Share files: It's easy to share your OneDrive files with friends or coworkers. You can choose whether they can edit or just read the files. This option is great for collaboration because multiple people can edit a document at the same time (also known as co-authoring).

If you don't already have a Microsoft account, you can go to the Creating a Microsoft Account lesson in our Microsoft Account tutorial.

To sign in to Office 2013:

When you use Office for the first time, it will ask you to sign in to your Microsoft account. However, if you don't sign in at that time, you can always sign in later.

Microsoft Word 365 My Account

  1. In the upper-right corner, click Sign in.


  2. Type your email address and then click Sign in.


    Typing an email address and clicking Sign in
  3. Click on the Password field.


  4. Type your password and then click Sign in.


    Signing in
  5. Your account name will now appear in the upper-right corner.


Signing out of Office 2013

If you're using Office at home or at work, it's usually more convenient to stay signed in. However, if you're using a shared computer (for example, at a library or business center), it's important to sign out when you're done. This will prevent other people from accessing your OneDrive files.

  1. Click the File tab.


    Clicking the File tab
  2. Click Account and then select Sign out.


  3. A warning message will appear. Click Yes to sign out.


    Clicking Yes to sign out

If you sign in to Windows 8 with your Microsoft account, you'll automatically be signed in to Office 2013, and it will not let you sign out of Office. Instead, you can sign out of Windows 8 to prevent other people from accessing your files.

Storing files in the cloud with OneDrive

Once you've signed in to your Microsoft account, your OneDrive will appear as an option whenever you save or open a file. You still have the option of saving files to your computer. However, saving files to your OneDrive allows you to access them from any other computer, and it also allows you to share files with friends or coworkers.

For example, when you click Save As, you can select either OneDrive or Computer as the save location.

Sign Into My Microsoft Word Account

To learn more, you can check out our lessons on Creating and Opening Documents and Saving and Sharing Documents.

Uploading existing files safely

You may already have documents on your computer, for example in your Documents library or on your Desktop. If you decide to upload them to OneDrive, it's important to understand that you're actually uploading a copy of each file. To avoid problems, you should only edit the version that is in your OneDrive. If you still have a copy of the file on your computer (for example, in your Documents library), you can either delete that copy or keep it as a backup.

Another solution is to download the OneDrive Desktop App. The app creates a folder on your computer that stays in sync with your OneDrive. You can then simply move your documents into that folder to upload them to your OneDrive. Since the files will stay in sync, you are free to open them either from the folder, or from your OneDrive.

Moving a file into the OneDrive folder

For more information on the OneDrive Desktop App, check out the Getting Started with OneDrive lesson in our OneDrive and Office Online tutorial.

Sharing and collaborating with OneDrive

Office 2013 allows you to share documents, spreadsheets, and presentations. Once you've saved a file to your OneDrive, you can invite people to read or edit it. The people you share with do not need to have Office 2013; they can read or make simple edits with Office Online.

Collaborating in Office

With some projects, you may have several people that need to edit the same document. When you share a document with OneDrive, multiple people can edit it at the same time. This is known as co-authoring. Co-authoring can be used with Word and PowerPoint, but it does not currently work with Excel. Each person will need to use either Office 2013 or Office Online.

If more than one person is editing a document, you'll see an icon at the bottom of the screen that shows how many other people are currently editing it. You can see their names by clicking the icon.

Viewing the names of other editors

Co-authoring works a little differently in each Office program. For example, in Word 2013, you won't see everyone's changes to the document as they make them. Instead, every time you save the document, it will update to show everyone's changes. Also, co-authoring does not work in Excel 2013, but it does work if everyone is using Excel in Office Online.

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