Microsoft has introduced Microsoft 365 E7 as a new top‑tier enterprise license designed for organizations moving beyond AI experimentation.
E7, also referred to as the Frontier Suite, combines Microsoft 365 E5, Microsoft 365 Copilot, the Microsoft Entra Suite, and the new Agent 365 governance layer into a single SKU.
At the same time, Microsoft announced Copilot Cowork. This capability allows Copilot to plan and execute multi‑step work across Microsoft 365 apps while staying within existing security, identity, and compliance boundaries.
Together, these updates signal a shift in how Microsoft expects AI to be used in production environments. AI is no longer positioned as a helper for isolated tasks. It is becoming an operational layer that needs oversight, identity controls, and auditability.
In this episode of the Demystifying Microsoft podcast, Nathan Taylor (SVP, Global Microsoft Practice Leader) is joined by Lindsay Cowan (Senior Manager, Sales and Business Development) to break down Microsoft’s E7 announcement and what it means for organizations adopting AI at scale.
Their conversation focuses on why Microsoft introduced a new enterprise SKU now, how AI agents change security and governance requirements, and where Copilot Cowork and Agent 365 fit into Microsoft’s broader strategy.
Microsoft 365 E7 is a bundled enterprise license designed for organizations operating AI at scale.
It combines several existing Microsoft capabilities into a single SKU, with added governance for AI-driven workflows:
Rather than introducing an entirely new platform, Microsoft consolidates these components and adds Agent 365 to address a growing gap. That gap is governance for AI agents that can act autonomously across systems and data.
Copilot Cowork extends Microsoft 365 Copilot beyond content generation.
Instead of responding to individual prompts, Cowork allows users to delegate outcomes. Copilot can plan and execute work across Outlook, Teams, Word, Excel, and other Microsoft 365 apps.
Copilot Cowork is powered by Microsoft’s Work IQ data layer. Work IQ uses signals from calendars, files, meetings, and collaboration patterns to understand context and intent.
Importantly, Copilot Cowork operates entirely within the Microsoft 365 tenant. Existing permissions, retention policies, and compliance controls still apply. Copilot Cowork is tied to the Microsoft 365 Copilot license, not E7.
As AI agents gain the ability to take action, the risk profile changes.
The concern is no longer limited to unauthorized access. Risks now include over‑permissioned agents, untracked automation, data leakage through AI workflows, and gaps during audits or legal discovery.
Microsoft’s approach is to introduce governance alongside new AI capabilities. Agent 365 and Purview integration are intended to provide oversight before agent sprawl becomes difficult to manage.
This reflects a shift toward treating AI agents more like digital workers than tools.
Microsoft 365 E7 became generally available on May 1, 2026. Agent 365 is also available as a standalone add-on at $15 per user per month for organizations that need agent governance without the full E7 bundle.
Copilot Cowork is currently available through the Microsoft Frontier program. A general availability date has not been announced.
As Copilot and AI agents become more capable, licensing decisions are no longer just about features. Identity, governance, and compliance play a central role in long‑term risk and cost management.
The Sourcepass Center of Excellence for Microsoft works with organizations to evaluate Microsoft 365 licensing, Copilot readiness, identity architecture, and AI governance strategies based on real‑world usage patterns.
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