Follow these steps to insert a table of contents: Click in your document where you want to create the table of contents. If you’d like it to appear on its own page, insert a page break (Ctrl+Enter) before and after inserting the ToC. Click the References tab. In the Table of Contents group, click Table of Contents.
No matter how great your idea is, the difference between your business proposal and someone else’s could boil down to the look and feel. A title page, header and footer, table of contents, and other elements separate a professional-looking document from a dull sea of text. It’s worth your time to learn how Word’s tools and wizards make such formatting easy—and keep exploring other ways to present your work in the best possible light.Headers and footersAny type of professional-looking document should have headers and footers.
Headers and footers are where the title of your document, the page number, and any footnotes and citations you’ve referenced in the body of your paper will reside. Based on the type of document you’re creating, you’ll want a header, footer, or both to house relevant information for the reader to reference.To insert a header and footer, use the Header & Footer menu in the Insert ribbon.Creating a header and/or footerTo get to the Header and Footer submenu, click Insert.