Early adopters of Microsoft Copilot: Is it worth $30/per user?
Yes - we're seeing significant time savings and productivity gains18%
Mixed bag - Copilot has its moments, but the price tag is hard to swallow55%
Not worth the hype - we haven't seen the ROI we expected, and the errors are concerning11%
Haven't tried it yet17%
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copilot has been well received for a variety of purposes. Writing documents (usually kick starting the process, user will still refine as needed), producing presentations (same as for documents) and taking meeting minutes are some of the key wins.
I will say -- Meeting summaries for Teams meetings is really nice -- especially since it's built in and you don't have to invite a 3rd party.<br><br>That said, having to record/transcribe every meeting in order to get those meeting notes is a bummer.
My biggest annoyance with it so far is the inability of CoPilot to work across tools. For instance it'd be great to be in an Excel spreadsheet and ask CoPilot to summarize a sheet into a presentation in PowerPoint -- but that's no-go.
It will tell you how to create rules in Outlook, but won't actually just create a rule for you.
I think it's as effective, generally, as other tools but I feel like the real value unlock will happen when it can bring the various tools in the Microsoft suite together and operate in a more unified way.