Use Microsoft Copilot in M365 for IT Documentation and Emails
What This Does
Microsoft Copilot is embedded directly in Outlook, Teams, and Word — letting you draft incident report emails, summarize meeting recordings from incident calls, and write IT documentation without leaving your Microsoft environment. If your organization has M365 Copilot licenses deployed, you already have access to this.
Before You Start
- Your organization has Microsoft 365 Copilot licenses deployed ($30/user/month add-on, or included in some enterprise E5 plans)
- You're signed into Microsoft 365 with your work account
- Check with your IT manager if Copilot is enabled — not all orgs have deployed it
Steps
1. Use Copilot in Outlook to draft professional emails
- Open Outlook (web or desktop)
- Click New Mail to start a new email
- Look for the Copilot button in the compose toolbar (lightning bolt icon or "Draft with Copilot")
- Click it — a text box appears asking what you want to write
- Type: "Write a professional email to [user] explaining that their VPN issue has been identified as a DNS configuration problem on the server side. The IT infrastructure team is working on it. Expected resolution is end of business tomorrow."
- Copilot drafts the email — review and send
What you should see: A drafted email in the compose window with professional language. You can click "Make it shorter" or "Change the tone" to adjust.
Troubleshooting: If you don't see the Copilot button, your organization may not have Copilot deployed. Try the web version (outlook.com with your work account) first.
2. Summarize a Teams meeting or incident call recording
- After a meeting recording in Microsoft Teams, go to the meeting chat
- Click on the recording → click Copilot (or look for the transcript summary)
- Copilot automatically generates: a meeting summary, key discussion points, and action items with owner names
- Click Copy to paste into your incident ticket or share via email
What you should see: A structured summary with action items tagged to specific people in the meeting.
Alternative (if Teams Copilot isn't available): Export the transcript (in Teams, click the recording → More options → Open in browser → Transcript → download). Paste the transcript into ChatGPT or Claude and ask for a structured summary.
3. Draft IT documentation in Word with Copilot
- Open Microsoft Word (new blank document)
- Click the Copilot icon in the ribbon (or press Alt+I on some versions)
- In the Copilot pane, type: "Write an IT runbook for resetting a user's Microsoft 365 password as an admin via the M365 Admin Center. Include step-by-step instructions, what the user needs to do after, and a troubleshooting section for common issues."
- Copilot drafts the document — review, adjust, and save to SharePoint or Confluence
What you should see: A multi-page Word document with structured headings, numbered steps, and a troubleshooting section.
Real Example
Scenario: You just finished a 90-minute incident call about an Exchange Online outage that affected 200 users. You need to send a post-incident summary to your IT manager within the hour.
What you do:
- Open the Teams meeting recording → Copilot summary → copy the action items and timeline
- Open a new Outlook email → Draft with Copilot → "Write a post-incident summary email about the Exchange Online outage from today's incident call. Here's the meeting summary: [paste Copilot's meeting summary]. Format: Executive summary, Timeline, Root cause, Resolution, Next steps."
- Review, adjust any incorrect details, and send
Time saved: Writing this from scratch: 30-45 minutes. With Copilot chain: 10-15 minutes.
Tips
- Copilot in Outlook's "Coaching" feature is excellent for sensitive emails — paste a draft and ask Copilot to suggest improvements to tone or clarity.
- In Teams, you can ask Copilot during a live meeting: "Catch me up on what I missed" if you join late to an incident call.
- Copilot in SharePoint (if deployed) can search across your entire SharePoint knowledge base to answer questions — useful for finding specific IT policies or procedures.
Tool interfaces change — Microsoft frequently updates Copilot placement in the M365 apps. If the Copilot button has moved, look in the ribbon or the right sidebar.