Rollout of Microsoft 365 Copilot Scheduled for November 1st

Rollout of Microsoft 365 Copilot Scheduled for November 1st

Microsoft’s M365 ​Copilot will be made generally‍ available to business customers beginning Nov. 1, the company ​announced Thursday.

Microsoft first unveiled plans to embed⁤ the generative AI assistant into its M365 collaboration and productivity⁤ apps — including Outlook, Teams, Excel, and PowerPoint — earlier⁢ this year. The M365 Copilot, built using gen AI models codeveloped⁢ with OpenAI, can automate ‍tasks‍ and create​ content, potentially saving users time and enhancing productivity.

Microsoft piloted‌ the​ new AI assistant with several ​hundred large business⁢ customers in‌ recent months ahead of the full launch. The ‌companies that tested it out included General⁣ Motors, KPMG, and ⁢Visa.

After its ⁣launch in ​November, the Copilot will cost $30 per user each month for customers on the E3,‌ E5, Business Standard, and Business Premium pricing tiers. This‍ is the⁣ same price as Google, which announced the⁤ availability of its Duet genAI features last month in its Workspace ‍suite — a rival‌ to Microsoft’s own office software ​tools — which includes⁤ Gmail, Docs‍ and ⁢Sheets. Other collaboration and productivity ⁤software vendors, such as​ Slack and Zoom, are also building‍ generative AI⁢ into ‍their products.

Small and medium-sized businesses ​will also get early access to a pilot program for⁣ the M365 Copilot, ⁣Microsoft announced in a blog post. This​ is currently invite -nly, but will be expanded ‌“over time.”

“The [general availability] of ⁤M365 ⁢Copilot is ‍long awaited and Gartner ‌sees strong demand from those who were ⁤not able‌ to join the limited private preview; there is really a sense ​of ‘fear of missing out,'” said Jason Wong, distinguished vice president analyst at Garter.‌ “We⁣ advise‍ and expect most customers‍ to do smaller rollouts to manage risk⁤ as well as assess value.​ However, government and education ‌organizations will have to wait a bit longer, as there is no timeline announced for those verticals.”

Patrick Moorhead, ⁣chief analyst at Moor Insights ​and Strategy, called the upcoming rollout a “big deal,” with expectations for ‌productivity ⁢benefits‍ running high.

“Microsoft has a lot to⁣ gain and a⁤ lot to lose if it’s⁢ not ⁢a true GA,” he said. “It doesn’t have to be ‍perfect, but it does need​ to demonstrate‌ instant value. If it can successfully create presentations from documents…and take great meeting notes with action items ⁣with ‍accuracy, it’s a winner.”

While Microsoft has touted⁣ the productivity benefits ​of Copilot, the language⁤ models that underpin generative AI can create certain‍ risks when used‌ in a​ business context. Language models have the‍ potential to output incorrect and copyright-infringing content, for instance, as well as presenting potential security ⁢and data protection risks. Microsoft recently announced it would defend M365 customers against​ any⁣ copyright-related legal claims ⁤that might occur as a⁣ result of⁤ outputs generated‍ by the⁤ M365 Copilot.

At an event in New York, Microsoft also announced…

2023-09-23 02:00:04
Source from www.computerworld.com rnrn

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