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Follow-up: More ways to shrink Office documents
Last night, I made a post about shrinking Powerpoints without any special software. Today I was saving a Word document and noticed the “Tools” menu, clicked it and saw … wait for it …

Compress Pictures!
This is an even simpler method for reducing Microsoft Office document sizes. Once you click “Compress Pictures,” you can choose the level of compression (printed or screen / web), and whether to delete cropped areas of pictures or not. You still have the original image, right?

The only thing left is to make this the default option during Office setup; If it’s possible, you’ll see it here. Please comment if you experience success with this tip
Joel
Edit: Found another awesome resource for reducing Office Document file sizes: University of Queensland “Ask IT” page (they also have the same information in .PDF handout format)
Drastically reduce PowerPoint file size – EASY!
Got a call from a user today:
“I need to send a powerpoint to a grant organization, and it’s got to get there TODAY! I tried sending it but got a message saying that it exceeds the limit for this user. I need you to take that limit off as soon as possible!”
Whoah, whoah – hold your horses. Those limits are there for a reason. How big is the file?
“I don’t know! Can you please just take the limit off?”
Well, let’s see what we can do first. Right click the file and click … [explaining right click vs. left, what tab the file size is listed on under a file's properties window (it's the general tab)...] OK. So the file is 11MB. That’s 7MB more than the limit. Let’s try something:
- Open the document and right click on an image.
- Click “Format Picture.”
- Now click on the tab “Picture.”
- Click Compress
- Select “All pictures in document.”
- Choose a resolution (hint: screen creates a smaller file).
- Check “Delete cropped areas of pictures” and “Compress Pictures.”
- Click OK (and Apply if prompted).
- Save the file. If you’re paranoid, save it with a new name.
So what’s the file size now?
“It says 1.1 em-bee”
You should be able to send it now.
“Wow, thanks!”
Resource used:
Microsoft Office Assistance: Reduce the size of your PowerPoint files