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Copilot in Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook & OneNote: what “free” really changes for your data

Copilot in Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook & OneNote: what “free” really changes for your data

Season 1 Published 5 months, 1 week ago
Description
(00:00:00) The Free AI Assistant in Microsoft 365
(00:00:55) The Power and Pitfalls of Copilot in Outlook
(00:03:55) Copilot's Writing Assistant in Microsoft Word
(00:07:47) Excel's AI Analyst: Miracle or Liability?
(00:11:12) PowerPoint's Design Assistant: Beautiful but Risky
(00:14:56) OneNote's AI-Powered Memory
(00:18:51) The Microsoft Graph: The Heart of Copilot's Intelligence
(00:22:13) The Importance of Governance in AI Adoption
(00:22:35) The Responsibility of AI Integration

In this episode of M365.fm, Mirko Peters looks behind the “Copilot is now free in Microsoft 365” headline and explains how Copilot, Microsoft Graph, and your daily work in Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and OneNote really connect. He shows how Copilot is less “new magic” and more data orchestration: it reads your files, emails, meetings, and notes through Graph to summarize, draft, and analyze content—while also dramatically increasing how visible your work becomes inside the tenant. You will learn what Copilot actually changes in your workflows, where it saves time, and where it silently raises the stakes for privacy, compliance, and auditability once AI is running across all your core apps.

Mirko walks app by app through the new reality. In Outlook, Copilot turns into an inbox butler that summarizes long threads, suggests replies, and surfaces deadlines—powered only by what you are allowed to see, but still constrained by your DLP and sensitivity label setup. In Word, it drafts and edits with context‑aware precision, pulling in related documents from OneDrive, Teams, and prior versions, which boosts productivity but can also expose sensitive content if labeling and permissions are weak. In Excel, Copilot behaves like a data whisperer: building charts from natural‑language prompts, detecting patterns, and correlating datasets, which is powerful—but can accidentally link confidential data sets if governance is not ready.

The episode then turns to what IT, security, and compliance teams must do before celebrating “free Copilot.” Mirko explains why Purview logging, Copilot activity events, and strong DLP policies are non‑negotiable once every app has an AI front end. He outlines how sensitivity labels, label inheritance, and clear acceptable‑use guidelines protect against oversharing, and why admins should treat Copilot outputs like any other regulated content—discoverable, auditable, and bound by the same policies. You also get concrete tips for monitoring AI usage, reading audit logs, and training users so they understand where Copilot gets its context and where the boundaries are.

By the end of the episode, you will see that “Copilot included” means faster work, not free compliance. If you are an IT admin, security or compliance owner, or a power user excited about AI in Microsoft 365, this conversation gives you the language and checklist you need to enjoy Copilot’s productivity gains without turning your tenant into a visibility and dataexposure trap.

WHAT YOU WILL LEARN
  • How Copilot, Microsoft Graph, and your M365 apps really work together behind the scenes.
  • Where Copilot in Outlook, Word, and Excel boosts productivity—and where it risks oversharing.
  • Which governance moves matter most: Purview logging, DLP, sensitivity labels, and audit events.
  • How “Copilot is free” changes your responsibilities for privacy, security, and user education.
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