Select User Accounts, followed by Mail. Select the option to Show Profiles from the Mail Setup window. Choose Remove from the drop-down menu that appears when you click on the profile you want to remove. Select Yes in the pop-up window and when it’s finished, OK to finalize the process.

Go to your Start menu and perform a search for “accounts.” Select Accounts from the results. Choose Delete Account from the drop-down menu. Select Yes when prompted to remove it.

Close the Windows Registry Editor program by clicking the X in its upper-left corner. Right click on your profile name folder and select Delete. Yes when prompted to delete it. Simply close all applications and restart your computer. Delete the registry file from Program Files (x86) -> Close the Windows Registry Editor application, then type regedit into the search.

Start by going to Start, then Settings. Click Accounts on the Settings screen. Select the account you want to Delete and press Disconnect from the drop-down menu. Confirm that you wish to delete the selected account.

The main benefit of Shared Experience is that your apps don’t make use of it. The feature hasn’t caught on with software suppliers as Microsoft had hoped, and it sits unused. As a result, the greatest method to prevent these account notifications is to turn off Shared Experience – which I’ll describe in more detail later on.