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Microsoft Adds Direct Copilot Integration to Microsoft 365

Microsoft is integrating its Copilot AI into the core Office apps -- Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and OneNote -- rather than offering it as a separate add-on.

At the same time, the company is unveiling redesigned icons and visual elements across the Microsoft 365 ecosystem.

Microsoft Copilot taps into Microsoft Graph, leveraging signals from documents, emails, meetings and chats, to generate context-aware outputs such as document summaries, PowerPoint slide formatting and content creation directly within the apps themselves. This week's update means commercial users on Microsoft 365 E3 or E5 plans will no longer need a separate Copilot license to access these capabilities.

Microsoft 365 Director Jeremy Chapman showed off some of the integration possibilities in a demonstration video.  In one example, he showed how the AI operates atop Microsoft Graph, which pulls in signals from documents, emails, meetings and chats to deliver context-aware assistance. The goal is to reduce time spent switching between apps and managing information manually, said Chapman. Microsoft positions Copilot as a way to keep users "in the flow," but with IT retaining oversight via the Copilot Control System -- a suite of tools to manage access, monitor usage, and enforce organizational policies.

Along with the expanded Copilot rollout, Microsoft has also introduced updated app icons for the Microsoft 365 suite. The new design system emphasizes fluid forms, expanded color gradients and simplified shapes, and was created to reflect AI's integration into the Microsoft suite, according to Jon Friedman, CVP of Design and Research for Microsoft 365.

"As a reflection, they encapsulate how AI is shifting the discipline of design and the nature of product development," said Friedman. "As a symbol, they embody an ethos rooted in connection, coherence, and fluid collaboration. While these principles guided previous redesigns, their meaning has shifted -- connection today isn't about visual consistency so much as the seamless flow of human intent across every Microsoft 365 canvas."

The changes affect not only the Office icons, but also Microsoft Teams, Loop and Copilot itself.

According to the Microsoft Design team, the icon updates are part of a broader effort to create a more cohesive user experience across Web, desktop and mobile. Accessibility was a key focus; the color palette has been expanded and tuned to provide better contrast and usability for those with visual impairments.

The redesign also signals Microsoft's broader shift toward making Microsoft 365 a more unified and intelligent platform, rather than a collection of discrete productivity tools.

Microsoft has not yet indicated when the icon updates will reach all users, but early adopters have already begun to see them appear in recent app builds. The Copilot integration began rolling out on Wednesday and is expected to be available to all eligible tenants in the coming weeks.

About the Author

Chris Paoli (@ChrisPaoli5) is the associate editor for Converge360.

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