Artificial intelligence is no longer a distant future concept. The integration of AI is rapidly becoming an integral part of everyday work. One of the most prominent players in this shift is Microsoft Copilot, an AI assistant integrated into Microsoft’s ecosystem to help users work faster, smarter, and with less friction.
This blog breaks down what’s included, what’s not, and how to evaluate whether Copilot is right for your organization.
But here’s where many businesses get confused: Not all Copilots are the same. Microsoft uses the “Copilot” name broadly, encompassing both free, built-in features and paid, enterprise-grade AI tools.
HOT TIP 🔥: Many business owners don’t realize that Microsoft essentially provides their employees with a type of “Chat GPT” for free. In our humble opinion, as business owners ourselves, we’d rather have our employees use the free version of Microsoft Co-Pilot rather than the free or paid version of ChatGPT.
Then, if you’re ready for an upgrade, use the paid version of Microsoft Co-Pilot.
Ok, but back to the original question: how can you know which version of Co-Pilot you’re using, or which one you might need?
Even without a paid license, many businesses already have access to basic Copilot functionality. These free or built-in features include:
Available on most modern Windows 11 devices, this version of Copilot can:
Limitations: It is similar to a general-purpose chatbot; useful, but not deeply integrated into business data.
Built into the Microsoft Edge browser, this Copilot can:
Limitations: Again, helpful (yes), but not connected to your company’s internal files.
Some light AI enhancements are available in:
Limitations: These features are helpful but don’t enable full automation or business-level data insights.
To unlock the powerful, business-altering features most people associate with Copilot, you need a paid enterprise license such as Copilot for Microsoft 365.
This upgraded version can:
Paid Copilot connects securely to your:
It can draft documents using your company’s tone, summarize large sets of emails, and answer questions based on your internal data. These are all capabilities the free version does not provide.
Paid Copilot enables deep, task-level assistance like:
These are the tools that truly move the productivity needle for businesses.
With a paid license, Copilot:
Free versions do not manage or control organizational data.
The answer depends on your business goals, workflows, and data security needs.
Our general answer is “yes”. Given the choice between Copilot and other chat functions, Copilot wins the argument for most organizations.
Microsoft Copilot is transforming how businesses work, but understanding the difference between what’s built in and what requires a paid upgrade is crucial. Free versions give you a capable general-purpose AI assistant, but only the paid Copilot for Microsoft 365 integrates with your business data, workflows, and security needs.
Still, as IT experts focused on small business support, we recommend Copilot over other competitive chat functions, such as ChatGPT.
If your organization relies on Microsoft 365 and wants to level up productivity, paid Copilot may be a strategic investment. For lighter needs or early experimentation, the built-in Copilot features are a great starting point.
Questions about Microsoft Co-Pilot or any of the Microsoft 365 suite of applications? We are here to support! Schedule a time to chat with a member of our team.