📰 Publisher Basics
Publisher vs Word
1
Word is a word processor — text flows continuously down the page. Publisher is a page layout tool — every element is a movable object on a fixed canvas
2
Publisher gives precise control over where text and images sit, essential for flyers, brochures, and multi-column print layouts
3
Best suited for: flyers, business cards, brochures, newsletters, postcards, banners, and greeting cards
📐 Layout & Templates
Starting from a Template
1
Publisher ships with hundreds of built-in templates categorized by publication type (flyer, newsletter, postcard, etc.)
2
Each template comes with a coordinated color scheme and font scheme you can swap globally with one click
3
Apply a Business Information Set (Insert tab) to auto-populate your logo, name, and contact details across every template you use
Text Boxes & Linking
1
All text in Publisher lives inside text boxes — there's no "page body" like in Word
2
Link text boxes (Format → Create Link) so an article overflows automatically from one box/page to the next, like a real newsletter
3
Use "Autofit" text options to shrink text automatically so it always fits its box
🖼️ Master Pages
Consistent Backgrounds with Master Pages
1
View → Master Page lets you place logos, page numbers, or background graphics that repeat on every page
2
Multi-page newsletters can use different master pages for the cover vs. interior pages
3
Edit the master once and it updates everywhere it's applied — same concept as Word's Styles or PowerPoint's Slide Master
🧩 Working with Objects
Precision Alignment
1
Drag guides off the rulers to create alignment lines that objects snap to (View → Guides to toggle visibility)
2
Use the Measurement pane (Format tab) to set exact X/Y position and size numerically instead of dragging by eye
3
Use Align and Group tools — same logic as PowerPoint — to keep multiple objects tidy
4
Layers pane (Home → Arrange → Layers) helps manage overlapping objects in complex layouts
🖨️ Print-Ready Setup
Preparing Files for a Print Shop
1
File → Export → "Commercial Print Settings" bakes in proper bleed and color settings for professional printers
2
Bleed means extending background colors/images slightly past the page edge so trimming doesn't leave a white sliver
3
Use CMYK color mode (not RGB) for anything going to a physical printer — ask your print shop for their exact specs
4
Export to PDF (File → Export → Create PDF/XPS) — the standard format any print shop will accept
5
Run Design Checker (File → Info) to catch low-resolution images, overlapping objects, or text running off the page before sending to print
✉️ Mail Merge in Publisher
Personalized Postcards & Labels
1
Mailings tab → Mail Merge works just like Word — connect an Excel list and insert merge fields onto your design
2
Great for personalized event invitations, postcards, or membership cards with names/addresses pulled from a spreadsheet
3
Preview results before printing to confirm field mapping is correct across every record
🛠️ Troubleshooting
Common Publisher Problems
1
Images look blurry when printed: Use images at least 300 DPI at the final print size — web images (72 DPI) are too low-res
2
Fonts substitute on another computer: Use Pack and Go (File → Save As → Publisher Package) to embed fonts and linked graphics together
3
Text box shows red "A" overflow icon: Text doesn't fit — resize the box, shrink the font, or link it to another box to continue the overflow