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Faisca1978
Known Participant
June 20, 2019
Question

Converting from InDesign to Word

  • June 20, 2019
  • 7 replies
  • 3101 views

Hi everyone,

I have a client who does a lot of RFPs, and because of the size and time constraints, they usually need them in Word. I was wondering if there were any good plugins or scripts to convert a well-designed page, with its styles and everything and convert it to Word so that all styles and the design are saved.

Ideas?

Thanks much,

Natalia

This topic has been closed for replies.

7 replies

Faisca1978
Known Participant
July 15, 2019

Thank you all for your replies. I have decided to work with a Word specialist. So they'll have the design in PDF to base the design from in Word. I know Word is very limited, but I also know why the client needs it. So, I'll pay someone to do the work I don't enjoy doing and don't feel comfortable doing.

But I will definitely look at WordsFlow, as it seems like a great plugin.

Thanks again!

Natalia

Community Expert
June 22, 2019

Hi Natalia,

for transferring paragraph styles and character styles, also for transferring anchored images from InDesign to Word you could try Em Software's product WordsFlow that can be installed as plugin with InDesign:

WordsFlow » Em Software

I think, with WordsFlow you have a good or better starting point than by converting PDF files to Word.

…the Pro version can export original InDesign story content in Word docx format, auto-linking to the result. So you can now take existing InDesign content—however it was produced—and push it out in Word format for further editing and revision, to be shared with your collaborators. As they make additions and changes to the exported document, you can pull them in with a normal WordsFlow story update, usually with just a double-click.

Regards,
Uwe

Steve Werner
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 22, 2019

I'd agree with Uwe that WordsFlow would provide a better workflow between InDesign and Word.

Also, WordsFlow offers a round-trip of documents between InDesign and Word. I don't use it personally but it gets very good reviews for those who do

Faisca1978
Known Participant
June 24, 2019

Thanks Steve,

I will definitely check it out! I much appreciate your 2-cents :-)

Derek Cross
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 22, 2019

They are two different tools – Word's for word processing and InDesign's for page design. You can do word processing in InDesign, but it's not advisable, just as you can do some page design in Word, but again, it's not advisable.

Often in our role, as professional document creators, we have to explain to clients, what is possible /advisable and what is not.

Faisca1978
Known Participant
June 24, 2019

I know. I have done that. Again, this is not because they don't want to do it in InDesign, but rather because their clients don't have the budget or time to do it. Also, my client thinks that you can do in Word almost as good a thing as InDesign. I have argued this point with him to exhaustion, and it doesn't go anywhere. He just doesn't know how much can be done in InDesign, but, again, the point is that if they need to make last minute changes to the RFPs, which are hundreds of pages long in some cases, they don't have InDesign on their end, which is who Word is the preferred tool, and they say that when their clients pitch to whoever they are pitching, the reviewers of the RFPs don't care so much about the look, but rather of the written content.

Derek Cross
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 24, 2019

If it suits them fine, but obviously they are not going to get anything like the quality of an InDesign document. I mean why are they even. involving InDesign in the first place! 

Geоrge
Legend
June 22, 2019

Converting indesign to word...

And you can find similar threads here if you wanna.

Remember, never say you can't do something in InDesign, it's always just a question of finding the right workaround to get the job done. © David Blatner
Inspiring
June 20, 2019

Have you tried making a PDF from Indesign and converting to Word via export to Word  in Acrobat

Faisca1978
Known Participant
June 22, 2019

I've done that in the past, it's messy... Besides, I want the styles to be mapped to Word as well.

BobLevine
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 20, 2019

Going from InDesign to Word is very much like putting an egg back in its shell after making an omelet.

Why not just design them in Word?

It's really not that hard and this type of document is firmly in Word's wheelhouse.

Faisca1978
Known Participant
June 22, 2019

Because things in Word are always shifting and acting up... lol

Jongware
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 22, 2019

Faisca1978  wrote

Because things in Word are always shifting and acting up... lol

But you cannot design a page in InDesign, export, and have it open exactly like that in Word. So you'll get shifting text anyway, and you may have to re-do large parts of your design.

To preserve styles, all you can do is export as RTF. But none of the page-layout-thingies that InDesign is famous for, will translate into Word's far more limited page layout capabilities. (Which it also is famous for.) Word is great to write text in. InDesign is great to layout pages in. Each has its strong points; neither can be translated exactly to the other.

Derek Cross
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 20, 2019

PDF is the only reliable solution for keeping everything as the InDesign document, but have a look this to see if it would meet your requirements: ID2Office - How to Convert InDesign to Word, Convert InDesign to PowerPoint