"Moving to E5 has been really good from a security point of view... Now we can get a holistic view of what’s going on, which helps us to make changes and recommendations for future plans."
IT Service Manager
Ian Harkess
Trusted by industry leaders
Kickstart Your FastTrack Journey
Fill out the short form below to express your interest in our FastTrack programme, and we’ll be in touch soon.
Please note: A minimum of 150 enterprise licenses is required for FastTrack eligibility.
“We needed to find solutions to a variety of issues whilst being a complex business, operating in a 24/7 environment. Stripe OLT listened and understood immediately the challenges we faced.”
IT Operations Manager
Simon Darley
Trusted by industry leaders
Let's Talk
Call us on one of the numbers below, we cover the whole of the UK, so call the nearest office.
“We needed to find solutions to a variety of issues whilst being a complex business, operating in a 24/7 environment. Stripe OLT listened and understood immediately the challenges we faced.”
Learn how Microsoft 365 Copilot is evolving with new AI agents and personalisation features, and what that means for enterprise adoption and governance.
“AI remains a tool that needs governance, not blind adoption.”
When Microsoft first introduced Copilot, it was positioned as a productivity enhancer – something that could summarise documents, rewrite content, or speed up everyday workflows. Useful, certainly, but not transformative.
Over time, however, we’re seeing Copilot evolve into something more strategic. Less of a glorified autocomplete, and more of a functional layer capable of handling real operational tasks, particularly for knowledge workers and analysts.
That shift is becoming clearer with the latest updates: the launch of Researcher and Analyst, two new agents designed to handle more complex reasoning tasks within Microsoft 365. Alongside this, Microsoft is rolling out enhanced personalisation, giving users a more responsive and context-aware experience.
These updates don’t change the security fundamentals (AI remains a tool that needs governance, not blind adoption) but it does mean the feature set is finally catching up with the enterprise hype.
Researcher & Analyst: New Reasoning Agents for Microsoft 365 Copilot
These two newest agents are now generally available for Copilot-licensed users:
Researcher helps with structured information-gathering tasks. It can summarise source material across multiple documents, generate research briefs, and assist with knowledge discovery – without needing to leave the Microsoft 365 environment.
Analyst is more data focused. It allows users to perform analysis across Excel files, generate code using Python, and return visuals or calculations. Crucially, the code it generates is viewable and auditable, which makes it easier to assess and verify output. A welcome addition from a governance standpoint…
These features are now built into the core Copilot app and provide up to 25 queries per user per month, depending on license terms.
For IT leaders, this is where things get more interesting, Copilot is no longer a single assistant – it’s turning into a framework of role-specific agents designed to support deeper business tasks.
Enhanced Personalisation: Rolling Out September 2025
Also landing in early September is Microsoft’s enhanced personalisation capability for Copilot – something I’m particularly looking forward to.
This includes:
Memory of user preferences
Adaptive responses that improve over time
Interface adjustments based on individual usage
Something to consider: This update is on by default for licensed users but can be controlled at the admin level. Microsoft has stated that memory and user data are managed with clear deletion controls – though, as always, organisations will want to verify policy alignment before enabling this widely.
While this isn’t a headline-grabbing feature, it’s a meaningful step forward – one that improves usability, especially for frequent Copilot users working on varied workloads across M365 apps.
What This Means for Security-Conscious Business Leaders
As with any new capability, these updates should be assessed through a risk-aware lens. Here’s what to keep in mind:
Feature
Considerations
Researcher Agent
Streamlines research workflows, but could pull from sensitive documents, admins should review data access policies
Analyst Agent
Adds real utility for data-heavy teams. Review code output processes and clarify who’s responsible for validation
Personalisation
Improves user experience, but requires trust in Microsoft’s handling of memory and context storage
Agent-Based Approach
Indicates that Microsoft sees AI as a long-term interface, policies will need to evolve to match that reality
Final Thought: Not Just New Features, More Mature Use Cases
These Copilot developments aren’t flashy, and that’s a good thing. Rather than marketing-driven hype, we’re seeing small improvements that make Copilot more useful, more structured, and more aligned with the real needs of enterprise users.
That said, any time AI is making decisions, generating data, or accessing internal systems, it should be treated as part of your broader risk surface.
Adoption should be paired with:
Internal testing and usage limits
Clear prompt guidance for different teams
Policy updates aligned to evolving use cases
From what I can see Copilot is becoming more capable, but that doesn’t mean it’s ready for unrestricted use across every department. As always, the value lies in controlled implementation.
If you’re looking to understand the risks in your estate – get in touch. We can help you assess where Copilot fits, what controls you need, and how to deploy it securely.
This website uses cookies. By using this site you agree to our use of cookies. We use cookies to enhance your experience. To understand the specific cookies we use and how we handle your data, see out Cookie Policy, Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions. Manage your preferences at any time by clicking the 'View Preferences' button.
Functional
Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes.The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.