Microsoft continues to expand what you can accomplish with Copilot, and one of the most useful additions is the ability to build your own agents. These lightweight automations can handle repetitive tasks, deliver consistent answers, and speed up the work you do every day.
The best part is that Microsoft 365 users can start using agents right now with the free version of Microsoft Copilot Chat. No additional licensing required!
In this walkthrough, Ted Brown, Director of IT Architecture at Ntiva, and Mike Davies from our partner, Sherweb break down what Copilot agents are, why they matter, and how you can build one in minutes.
Copilot agents are small, task-focused assistants that help automate repetitive work and improve consistency.
You can build agents using the free version of Copilot Chat included with standard Microsoft 365 licenses.
Creating an agent takes only a few minutes: describe the task, add instructions, test, and save.
Agents are ideal for work you do often, work that requires consistent formatting, or work that slows you down.
The free version covers most individual and small-team needs, while advanced data access requires the paid Copilot license.
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A Microsoft Copilot agent is a focused tool that performs a defined task. Rather than acting as a general AI assistant, an agent follows a specific purpose and set of instructions. You control its behavior, the format of its responses, and the information it draws from. Once created, the agent becomes a reliable starting point for work you repeat often.
Copilot agents help with tasks such as:
Drafting routine communications
Producing summaries and recaps
Creating social posts and announcements
Preparing internal updates and checklists
Maintaining templates that need a consistent structure
If a task appears often in your workload and follows a predictable pattern, a Copilot agent can help you handle it faster and with more consistency.
The free version of Copilot Chat includes the full agent creation workflow. Anyone with a core Microsoft 365 license can build agents, test them, and share them with colleagues. This makes it easy for small teams or individual users to experiment before committing to broader Copilot licensing.
The paid Copilot for Microsoft 365 license expands agent capabilities by allowing deeper access to SharePoint, OneDrive, and internal business data. For many early use cases, though, the free tools already provide meaningful value.
Copilot agents rely on a simple structure that is easy for users to control.
Every agent has:
A description of its purpose
A clear set of instructions that define tone, formatting, or required elements
Optional reference material such as a public URL or a single uploaded file
Suggested starter prompts to guide consistent use
This structure helps the agent deliver predictable output and reduces the time you spend rewriting or correcting content.
Creating an agent inside Copilot Chat is straightforward and does not require technical experience.
Use either the desktop app or the web version.
You will be prompted to either describe your agent or choose from a template.
Type a plain language description such as:
“I need an agent that prepares event announcements using the details from a registration link.”
Copilot will translate your description into a draft agent with a name, purpose, and starter instructions.
This is where you shape the behavior of the agent. You can include tone preferences, formatting rules, writing guidelines, required hashtags, or any other direction that should apply every time.
You can attach a public link or upload a single document. This helps the agent pull consistent information from a known source.
The Configure panel shows every part of the agent in one place. You can adjust the description, edit the instructions, refine capabilities, and update example prompts.
On the right side of the screen, you can test your agent immediately. This helps you refine your instructions before saving.
Agents can remain private or be shared with individuals or teams. Sharing is optional and can be adjusted at any time.
Copilot provides a set of templates designed to help users understand how effective agents are structured. These templates include writing helpers, meeting prep assistants, research guides, and prompt coaching tools.
Reviewing a template gives you a clear sense of how to organize instructions, which capabilities to enable, and how to shape expected outputs.
For many users, templates are the fastest path to learning how to build an agent of their own.
The best agent opportunities appear when a task:
Happens often
Takes more time than it should
Requires consistent output each time
These are the tasks that benefit most from automation. Examples include recurring social posts, customer updates, schedule reminders, internal documentation, or content that must follow a standard structure. An agent reduces the amount of work required while improving consistency.
The free version of Copilot Chat is powerful, but it does have limits. It cannot pull directly from SharePoint libraries or multiple internal data sources. It also cannot serve as a deep organizational knowledge agent. These capabilities require the paid Copilot or Copilot Studio licenses.
Even with these restrictions, the free version is more than capable of supporting common productivity tasks and helping users understand where AI can provide the most value.
Read more: Microsoft 365 Pricing Updates: What They Mean for Your Budget
Copilot agents give organizations a practical entry point into AI without a complex rollout. They help teams eliminate repetitive work, improve quality, and accelerate common tasks. Most agents can be created in minutes, and the improvement is immediate.
For organizations exploring how AI fits into their workflow, agents are one of the simplest and most effective ways to start.
If your team wants help identifying potential agent use cases or evaluating when to move into more advanced AI tools, Ntiva can guide you through the next steps.