Document-based workflows can consume plenty of your time and effort, no matter if you do them regularly or only sometimes. It doesn’t have to be. In fact, it’s so easy to inject your workflows with additional efficiency and structure if you engage the right solution - DocHub. Sophisticated enough to handle any document-connected task, our platform lets you adjust text, pictures, notes, collaborate on documents with other users, produce fillable forms from scratch or templates, and digitally sign them. We even shield your data with industry-leading security and data protection certifications.
You can access DocHub editor from any location or device. Enjoy spending more time on creative and strategic work, and forget about monotonous editing. Give DocHub a try today and watch your Formal Itinerary workflow transform!
Hi everyone, my name is Kevin. Today I want to show you how you can insert a table of contents into Microsoft Word. And as full disclosure before we jump into this, I work at Microsoft as a full-time employee. Im required to say that by HR anytime I talk about our products. So imagine that you have a school report that youre working on, or maybe youre turning in a project for work, and youve got lots of pages and lots of sections in there. Well, a table of contents can make it easier to get back to the content that people want to refer back to. So how do you do that? Its actually easier than you think. And Ive pulled up a sample school report here. I know Ive been out of school for a little while, but brings back memories when I jump into this. Lets jump on my PC and Ill show you how to do this. Here I am on my PC, and I am working on an important school report. And yes, I did not copy any of this from Wikipedia. Although if I were to turn this in,