There is a lot of marketing around Copilot, but in practice, its value often shows up in small, everyday tasks. It is not a replacement for expertise, but it can help reduce the repetitive work that fills up the day. If you’re still evaluating where Copilot fits, here’s a practical breakdown of Microsoft 365 Copilot use cases inside the tools your team already uses.
Below are a few practical Microsoft Copilot use cases that highlight where it can support day-to-day work.
Note: The features below require a Microsoft 365 Copilot (Business) license and the corresponding Microsoft 365 apps (Outlook, Teams, Word, Excel).
1. Summarizing Long Email Threads
Email threads can quickly turn into long, multi-message conversations, making it difficult to follow what actually happened. Copilot in Outlook can summarize the thread and highlight key points.
Example prompt: Summarize this email conversation and identify the key decisions.
This is especially helpful when you are pulled into a conversation late or returning after time away.
For a deeper look at how this works in practice, see how Copilot improves email workflows in Outlook.
2. Generating Meeting Summaries
After a Teams meeting, Copilot in Microsoft Teams can generate a summary of the discussion and outline action items.
Example prompt: Summarize the meeting and list any action items assigned to me.
Instead of relying on someone to capture notes during the meeting, the system can generate a usable summary afterward.
This becomes even more powerful when used across chats, calls, and meetings. See how Copilot works inside Teams.
3. Creating a First Draft of a Document
Starting a document from scratch is often the most time-consuming part. Copilot in Word can generate a rough first draft that you can then edit and refine.
Example prompt: Draft a short document describing a support case intake process.
The output is rarely perfect, but it can be a good starting point.
Copilot can also turn outlines or notes into full presentations, especially useful for client-facing work.
4. Exploring Data in Excel
Copilot in Excel can analyze spreadsheet data and highlight patterns without requiring complex formulas.
Example prompt: Identify the top 5 customers by revenue and show the trend over the last 12 months.
This can help quickly surface insights when working with unfamiliar data.
5. Finding Information Across Documents
Information is often spread across emails, Teams chats, and documents. Microsoft 365 Copilot can search across these sources and bring together relevant insights.
Example prompt: What were the key decisions from last month’s project meetings?
Instead of manually searching through files and messages, Copilot can compile and summarize the results.
This is where Copilot starts to feel less like a tool and more like a layer across your entire Microsoft 365 environment.
Final Thoughts: Small Efficiencies Add Up
Microsoft Copilot works best when it supports the work your team is already doing — summarizing conversations, drafting documents, analyzing data, and finding information faster. Individually, these are small wins. Across a full team, they compound quickly.
See If Copilot Fits Your Team
If you’re already using Microsoft 365, Copilot can start delivering value quickly, but only if it aligns with how your team actually works. We start with a simple fit check to help you:
- Identify where Copilot will save time immediately
- Avoid overcomplicating rollout
- Get value without changing systems