Microsoft’s March 2026 updates signal a shift in how AI operates inside Microsoft 365.
Until now, Copilot has focused on individual tasks. Drafting content, summarizing information, and responding to prompts in the moment.
That model is changing.
Microsoft is moving toward AI that can take action across systems and stay active beyond a single interaction.
Microsoft 365 E7 brings that shift into focus. It bundles existing enterprise capabilities with new controls built for AI agents. Copilot Cowork offers an early look at how AI starts executing work instead of just suggesting it.
These updates move AI into a more operational role inside enterprise environments.
In this episode of the Demystifying Microsoft podcast, Nathan Taylor is joined by Mike Hughes to break down how Microsoft 365 E7, Agent 365, and Copilot Cowork fit into Microsoft's enterprise AI strategy.
The conversation covers several key changes:
Licensing is shifting around AI that works across applications and data
Identity and governance are becoming baseline requirements
As AI beings to act on its own, issues like agent sprawl, security boundaries, and cost visibility become part of daily operations.
This marks the point where AI moves beyond isolated use cases and into production environments.
Microsoft 365 E7 is not a brand new platform. It bundles capabilities many organizations already use with new controls built for AI agents.
The license brings together:
Microsoft 365 E5 as the productivity, security, and compliance foundation
Copilot for Microsoft 365 embedded across applications
The Microsoft Entra Suite for identity, access, and Zero Trust networking
Agent 365 for AI agent identity, visibility, and lifecycle management
The real change is not Copilot alone. It is the governance layer introduced for AI agents that operate across systems and data.
When AI can trigger workflows, run on schedules, or act without direct prompts, visibility and control become required.
As AI agents move from experiments to persistent automation, traditional security models fall short.
The risk goes beyond unauthorized access. It shows up in areas like:
Agent 365 addresses this by treating agents as identities, not tools. They can be monitored, governed, and managed throughout their full lifecycle, similar to user accounts.
The goal is to keep oversight in place as automation becomes part of daily operations.
How Copilot Cowork Changes the Role of AI in Microsoft 365
Copilot Cowork moves Copilot beyond content generation and into task execution.
Instead of responding to one prompt at a time, you define the outcome and Copilot handles the rest. It plans and carries out work across Outlook, Teams, Words, Excel, and OneDrive.
Key capabilities include:
The shift is that AI can continue working over time of only assisting in the moment.
Identity remains the control plane.
The Microsoft Entra Suite enforces access decisions, validates device context, and supports Zero Trust networking. Global Secure Access reduces reliance on traditional VPN models and moves enforcement closer to identity.
As AI agents being operating with their own identities, these controls extend beyond users to automation.
Identity continues to define how access is granted and audited across the environment.
As AI usage grows, cost management gets more complex.
Many AI capabilities are consumption‑based, including Security Copilot and advanced agent workflows. How AI is used directly impacts cost.
Unexpected spend often comes from:
Getting ahead of these patterns makes it easier to manage cost as AI scales.
As AI becomes operational, licensing decisions go beyond feature sets.
Identity, governance readiness, and cost management now play a central role in long‑term planning.
Organizations that address for these factors early are better positioned to scale AI without losing oversight.
The Sourcepass Center of Excellence for Microsoft works with organizations to evaluate Microsoft 365 licensing, Copilot readiness, identity design, and AI governance based on how environments actually operate.
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