Microsoft’s Copilot is adding AI agents for routine tasks

Microsoft will allow its customers to build autonomous artificial intelligence agents from next month, in its latest push to tap the booming technology amid growing investor scrutiny of its hefty AI investments.

The company is positioning autonomous agents—programs that need little human intervention unlike chatbots—as “apps for an AI-driven world” that can handle client queries, identify sales leads and manage inventory.

Other big technology companies such as Salesforce have also touted the potential of such agents, tools that some analysts say could provide companies with an easier path to monetizing the billions of dollars they are pouring into AI.

Microsoft said its customers can use Copilot Studio—an application that requires little knowledge of computer code—to create such agents in public preview from November. It is using several AI models developed in-house and by OpenAI for the agents.

The company is also introducing 10 ready-for-use agents that can help with routine tasks ranging from managing supply chain to expense tracking and client communications.

In a demo, McKinsey & Co, which had early access to the tools, created an agent that can manage client inquires by checking interaction history, identifying the consultant for the task and scheduling a follow-up meeting.

“The idea is that Copilot (the company’s chatbot) is the user interface for AI,” Charles Lamanna, corporate vice president of business and industry Copilot at Microsoft, told Reuters.

“Every employee will have a Copilot, their personalized AI agent, and then they will use that Copilot to interface and interact with the sea of AI agents that will be out there.”

Tech giants are facing pressure to show returns on their big AI investments. Microsoft’s shares fell 2.8% in the September quarter, underperforming the S&P 500, but remain more than 10% higher for the year.

Some concerns have risen in recent months about the pace of Copilot adoption, with research firm Gartner saying in August its survey of 152 IT organizations showed the vast majority had not progressed their Copilot initiatives past the pilot stage.

—Aditya Soni, Reuters

https://www.fastcompany.com/91213113/microsoft-copilot-ai-agents-routine-tasks?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Établi 11mo | 21 oct. 2024, 18:30:06


Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire

Autres messages de ce groupe

TikTok is obsessed with this guy who bought an abandoned golf course in Maine

Buying an abandoned golf course and restoring it from scratch sounds like a dream for many golf fans. For one man in Maine, that dream is now reality.

A user who posts under the handle @

5 sept. 2025, 22:50:05 | Fast company - tech
Andreessen Horowitz is not a venture capital fund

I was reading funding news last week, and I came to a big realization: Andreessen Horowitz is not a venture capital fund.

A lot of people are thinking it. So there, I said it.

5 sept. 2025, 20:30:11 | Fast company - tech
Fake Holocaust AI slop is flooding social media

A post circulating on Facebook shows a man named Henek, a violinist allegedly forced to play in the concentration camp’s orchestra at Auschwitz. “His role: to play music as fellow prisoners

5 sept. 2025, 20:30:09 | Fast company - tech
Think this AI-generated Italian teacup on your kid’s phone is nonsense? That’s the point

In the first half of 2025, she racked up over 55 million views on TikTok and 4 mil

5 sept. 2025, 20:30:08 | Fast company - tech
Trump’s ‘no tax on tips’ policy is a win for influencers

What do a yoga instructor, a parking garage attendant, and an influencer have in common? They are all now exempt from paying income tax on their tips under President Donald Trump’s “Big Beautiful

5 sept. 2025, 15:50:07 | Fast company - tech