Cheat sheet
Microsoft Copilot cheat sheet
A one-page reference for Microsoft Copilot at work: the AI built into Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and Teams. UK English. Check anything that matters against a trusted source.
Key capabilities by level
Foundations
- Ask Copilot Chat questions and draft text from the web experience or Teams.
- Summarise a long email thread or Word document in a few lines.
- Draft a first version of a document or reply, then refine it.
Practitioner
- In Word, draft or rewrite from a prompt; in Outlook, summarise and reply.
- In Excel, ask for formulas, trends and quick summaries of your data.
- In Teams, catch up on a meeting you missed and pull out the actions.
Power User
- Generate a PowerPoint deck from a Word document, then reshape it.
- Use Copilot across your files with work grounding, so answers draw on your own documents.
- Build repeatable agents for a team task where your organisation allows it.
Tier map in three lines
- Free: Microsoft Copilot (web and app) for general questions and drafting.
- Individuals: Microsoft 365 Personal and Family include Copilot in the desktop apps.
- Organisations: Copilot Chat comes with eligible Microsoft 365 plans; the Microsoft 365 Copilot add-on opens it up fully across the apps and your work data.
See the current Copilot pricing for individuals and for business for today's details.
Five best prompts
- Summarise this email thread and list what I've been asked to do, with any deadlines. [in Outlook]
- Draft a polite reply agreeing to the meeting but asking for the agenda first. [in Outlook]
- In this workbook, add a column that flags any Fernway order over £5,000 as "Review", and explain the formula. [in Excel]
- Turn this project brief into a six-slide deck: context, goals, plan, risks, timeline, next steps. [in Word, then export]
- Recap the meeting I missed: key decisions, open questions, and who owns each action. [in Teams]
Top three mistakes
- Assuming it sees everything. Copilot works from the file, email or chat you point it at; tell it where to look.
- Trusting Excel answers without checking. Read the formula it wrote and spot-check the numbers before you rely on them.
- Sending its draft as-is. It gets tone and detail wrong. Read every message before it leaves your outbox.