Copilot integration in Microsoft 365 apps makes it a snap to generate first drafts, revise text, and get instant summaries for long docs or email threads. Here’s how to use Copilot for writing assistance in Word, Outlook, and OneNote. Credit: Dom J / IDG One of the most enticing uses for generative AI is to help you write. Anyone can get writing help from Microsoft’s Copilot genAI tool via the free Copilot web or mobile app. But Copilot becomes especially useful when it’s integrated with various Microsoft 365 apps. As you compose, edit, or view a document in Word, for example, you can summon Copilot to assist you in several ways: It can generate rough drafts, polish or change the tone of your writing, and summarize long passages of text. Copilot can also help you compose or summarize emails in Outlook and help you rewrite or summarize notes in OneNote. This guide will get you started on the basics of using Copilot for your writing in Microsoft 365 apps. But you’ll have to pay for a Copilot subscription in addition to your current Microsoft 365 plan. In this article: How to use Copilot in Microsoft 365 apps Generate a rough draft in Word or Outlook Get email draft coaching in Outlook Rewrite text in Word or OneNote Summarize long documents, notes, emails, or threads [ Download our Microsoft Copilot for writing cheat sheet PDF ] How to use Copilot in Microsoft 365 apps Individuals with a free Microsoft account or a Microsoft 365 Family or Personal subscription can purchase a Copilot Pro subscription for $20 per month. (A one-month free trial is available.) Each person who wants to use Copilot Pro must have their own subscription. If you have a free Microsoft account, the Copilot Pro subscription lets you use Copilot in certain Microsoft 365 apps on the web only. If you have a paid Microsoft 365 plan, you’ll be able to use Copilot in the desktop and mobile versions of those M365 apps as well. Once you’ve signed up, you may need to refresh your Microsoft 365 license before Copilot becomes available in the apps. If you’re on a Microsoft 365 business plan (such as through a company you work for), a Copilot for Microsoft 365 subscription costs $30 per user per month. This must be paid annually at $360 up front, and there’s no trial period. (Apparently, Microsoft presumes that your company will foot this hefty tab.) A Copilot Pro subscription cannot be used with a Microsoft 365 business account. This guide goes over how to use Copilot in Word, Outlook, and OneNote to help you compose and revise text. I’ll demonstrate using Copilot Pro with an individual Microsoft 365 account, but the descriptions also apply to Copilot for Microsoft 365 used with a Microsoft 365 business plan. Most of the steps and user interfaces are alike. I’ll also note additional features that are available under the business versions of Copilot and Microsoft 365. Note: Microsoft 365 apps aren’t completely consistent on different platforms — for instance, a menu choice in Word for Windows might be named differently from the same option in the web version of Word. In these cases, I’ve tried to include both names. You may still find instances where a button or menu item doesn’t match, but it’s generally obvious what to do. Generate a rough draft in Word or Outlook Copilot can help you compose text drafts in Word and Outlook. In Outlook, you use Copilot through a panel that appears over the main area of the app. In Word, you can use Copilot from a similar panel that overlays the document, or from a sidebar that opens along the right of the page. Using the “Draft with Copilot” panel in Word and Outlook Word: Start with a new, blank document or open an existing document that you’d like to add more writing to. (Set the cursor where you want the generated text to be inserted.) Click the Copilot icon that appears in the left margin. To get started with Copilot in Word, click the Copilot icon in the left margin or press Alt-Ion your keyboard. Howard Wen / IDG The “Draft with Copilot” panel appears over the document. In the text entry box, you’ll type in a prompt that describes the text you want Copilot to write. (More on that in a moment.) Type your prompt into the “Draft with Copilot” panel. Howard Wen / IDG In the desktop version of Word for Windows, there’s a Reference a file button at the bottom of the Draft with Copilot panel. Clicking this may let you select a document in your OneDrive or SharePoint for Copilot to base its generated text on, including content, writing style, and formatting. (Business users can select up to three files for Copilot to reference.) You can also type your prompt followed by a / (forward slash) and a document’s file name to trigger Copilot to reference it. But know that this function may not work for you – it apparently depends on whether Copilot itself thinks you have documents that it can reference for you. Outlook: With the cursor in the message body of a new email, click the Copilot button on the Home tab of the ribbon toolbar. On the drop-down menu that opens, click Draft with Copilot. To get started with Copilot in Outlook, click the Copilot button in the ribbon toolbar. Howard Wen / IDG On the “Draft with Copilot” panel that opens, type your prompt inside the text entry box. The panel is similar to what you see in Word, but with an additional option: a button with two sliders on it that may say Adjust or Generate options, depending on your version of Outlook. When you click it, a drop-down menu opens that lists options for tone of voice and word length for the generated email draft. In Outlook, you can designate tone of voice and general length for Copilot’s output. Howard Wen / IDG Crafting your prompts Prompts are sentences that you enter to instruct Copilot (or other AI assistants) how to compose the text you want created. Your prompt should minimally include the subject and a few specifics about the writing you want it to generate. To get started, describe the kind of text you want Copilot to generate and add a detail or two about it. These prompts can be simple or a little more complex. For example: “Create a brief business pitch for a new vegan restaurant that will be located in downtown Atlanta, Georgia.” “Write an opening paragraph describing my interest in a technical support job opening at Microsoft.” “Write a few sentences that inquire if there are any job openings in technical support at Microsoft.” “Compose a polite follow-up with the recipient about a video call we had last week.” The more specifics you include in your prompt, the more likely you are to get good results. For instance, if you have notes that contain specific data points that you want to include in the generated text, copy and paste those notes into your prompt. If you have an outline for the topics you want to cover in the draft, paste that in as well. But frankly, there are no hard rules about writing prompts — just use your imagination and see how Copilot responds. Expect that the AI may not generate results that you like (if it generates any at all). Keep experimenting with the descriptions in your prompts until you coax Copilot to produce a useful response. Once you’ve entered your prompt (and optionally selected a tone and length in Outlook), click the Generate button or press Enter on your keyboard and wait for Copilot to work its AI magic. The results are in – actions you can take When Copilot has generated a draft, it appears in the document or email with a toolbar below it. In Word, use the toolbar below the generated draft to keep, retry, discard, or refine the text. Howard Wen / IDG You can use the toolbar to perform the following functions: Click the Keep it button to keep the newly minted words in your document or email. You can then edit the generated text in the doc or email as you see fit. Click the Regenerate button (two circular arrows) if you’re not satisfied with the result and want Copilot to generate a whole new one. Click the Discard button (a trashcan) to discard the result. Refine the result by typing more prompts in the text entry box (e.g., “add more details,” “make this sound more professional,” or “make it shorter”) and clicking the arrow. Copilot will generate an updated writing result using your additional commands and descriptions. Optionally click the thumbs up or down icon in the upper-right corner of the toolbar to rate the quality of the result that Copilot generated. Presumably, this helps train the Copilot to produce better results in the future. In Outlook, the buttons and text entry box are arranged differently in the toolbar, but they perform the same actions on an email draft that Copilot generates for you. You can also use the Adjust or Generate options button to change the tone or length. The toolbar that appears with generated text in Outlook offers the same functions as in Word. Howard Wen / IDG Important: All AI-generated content can contain errors or outright fabrications, known as hallucinations. When you insert text that Copilot has generated into a document or email, be sure to fact-check it carefully. AI-generated content also tends to be generic and a bit boring, so you’ll likely want to edit it to inject your own personality or writing style. Using the Copilot sidebar in Word On the Home tab in Word’s ribbon toolbar, click the Copilot button. This will open the Copilot sidebar to the right. At the bottom of the sidebar, type your prompt inside the text entry box and click the arrow button (or press Enter). Copilot will generate text and display it inside the sidebar. Generated text in the Copilot sidebar in Word. Howard Wen / IDG Click the Copy button to copy the writing to your PC clipboard. You can then paste it into a document, note, email, or elsewhere. Unlike the Draft with Copilot panel, the Copilot sidebar doesn’t include tools for refining text it generates from scratch. What’s more, Copilot’s behavior in the sidebar feels a little unreliable, producing inconsistent results. The sidebar seems better used for summarizing your document or asking the AI questions about it than for generating text. Get coaching on an email draft in Outlook If you’d rather compose emails yourself but would like some suggestions for improvement, there’s a nifty Copilot feature in Outlook called email coaching. After you’ve written your email draft, click the Copilot button on the Home tab in the ribbon toolbar. On the menu that appears, choose Coaching by Copilot. Copilot will review your draft and offer specific suggestions for improving it in terms of tone, reader engagement, and clarity. Copilot can critique your email draft and offer suggestions for improvement. Howard Wen / IDG Rewrite text in Word or OneNote You can rewrite passages of text in a Word document or a OneNote page. This can be useful if you feel that your writing could use a little more detail, or if a paragraph sounds too wordy. In Word, you can use either the Copilot panel or sidebar (as described earlier in this guide) to command Copilot to rewrite. In OneNote, you can use the sidebar or a right-click menu option. Note: As of this writing, Copilot is available for OneNote only in the Windows desktop app. Using the “Rewrite with Copilot” panel in Word Highlight the passage of text that you want Copilot to rewrite. The Copilot button will appear in the margin to the left of the text that you highlighted. Click it, and on the menu that opens, select Auto rewrite or Rewrite with Copilot. Alternatively, you can right-click on your highlighted text, and on the menu that opens, select Copilot > Rewrite with Copilot. In Word, select the text you want to rewrite, click the Copilot icon in the left margin, and select Auto rewrite. Howard Wen / IDG Either way, the “Rewrite with Copilot” panel appears below your highlighted text. Copilot will generate and present up to three rewritten versions in the panel. Click the arrows at the top of the panel to cycle through the rewrites. Reviewing and refining Copilot’s suggested rewrite for the highlighted text. Howard Wen / IDG Below the rewritten text, you can click the following buttons: Replace will replace the original text that you highlighted with the currently visible rewritten version. Insert below will insert the rewritten version below the original text you highlighted (so that you can decide later if you want to keep it). The Regenerate button (two circular arrows) will generate another result. In the Word desktop app for Windows, there’s an Adjust tone button (an icon with two sliders); it opens a menu that lets you select another writing style. Copilot will then adjust its result with the style you select. In the Word web app, there’s a text entry box where you can refine the result by typing more prompts. Note: Users with Copilot and M365 business subscriptions can also have Copilot rewrite messages in Teams. This feature works similarly to the Rewrite with Copilot panel in Word. Using the Copilot sidebar in Word or OneNote On the Home tab in the ribbon toolbar, click the Copilot button to open the Copilot sidebar to the right. To have Copilot rewrite the whole document or note, type rewrite inside the sidebar’s text entry box. To have it rewrite a specific paragraph, supply the paragraph number. You can also describe how you want the text to be rewritten, such as rewrite first paragraph to be shorter or rewrite paragraph 3 to sound more professional. Copilot’s rewritten text appears in the sidebar. Below this result you’ll see the Copy button to copy the rewritten text to your clipboard. A rewritten paragraph in the sidebar. Howard Wen / IDG If you want to adjust Copilot’s rewriting result, you can click one of the suggested prompts that appear in the sidebar below the generated text and above the text entry box. To see different prompt suggestions, click the circular arrow icon. In the text entry box, you can refine the result by typing more prompts. Although the Copilot sidebar offers more options for refining its rewritten text than it does for text it generates from scratch, it’s still underpowered compared to the Rewrite with Copilot panel. The best way to rewrite text with Copilot in Word is to use the Rewrite with Copilot panel. Using the right-click menu in OneNote Alternatively, in OneNote, you can right-click the top bar of a text field on a page. On the menu that opens, select Copilot and on the next menu, Rewrite. In OneNote, you can use a text field’s right-click menu to trigger a Copilot rewrite. Howard Wen / IDG This action will trigger Copilot to rewrite everything inside this text field. The rewrite will then be set inside the top of the text field. The rewritten text appears in the text field above the original text. Howard Wen / IDG Summarize long documents, notes, emails, or threads You can have Copilot generate a brief summary of a long document in Word or a page in OneNote. For this to work well, Microsoft says the document or page should contain at least 300 words but no more than 20,000. In Outlook, Copilot can summarize a long email and, even more useful, the conversation within an entire email thread. Using the Copilot sidebar in Word and OneNote With the document opened in Word or page opened in OneNote, highlight the text that you want summarized. (If you want a summary of the entire document or page, skip this step.) Click the Copilot button on the Home tab of the ribbon toolbar to open the Copilot sidebar. Inside the text entry box, type summarize and click the arrow button. Copilot will generate a summary and display it inside the sidebar. Copilot’s summary of a long document appears in the sidebar. Howard Wen / IDG Below the summary, there’s the familiar Copy button to copy the summary to your PC clipboard. Below that, you can click References to see a list of citations within the document that Copilot used to generate this summary. Clicking a snippet of the cited text will show in the main window of the app where in the document or page these words are. Clicking the down arrow to the right of a citation will show the passage that Copilot used as a citation. Click References to view citations from the document that Copilot used for its summary. Howard Wen / IDG Between the results field and the text entry box, you’ll see suggested prompts that you can click to revise the summary. Click the circular arrow icon to refresh these prompts with new suggestions. Using the right-click menu in OneNote Right-click the top bar of a text field. On the menu that opens, select Copilot > Summarize. This action will trigger Copilot to summarize everything inside this text field. The summary will then be set inside the top of the text field. Copilot summaries created via OneNote’s right-click menu appear at the top of the text field being summarized. Howard Wen / IDG Summarizing emails and threads in Outlook Open the email or conversation that you want to summarize. Click Summarize or Summary by Copilot at the top of the email thread. Copilot will generate a summary of the email or thread. A Copilot-generated summary of an email. Howard Wen / IDG This summary will be posted at the top of the email or thread. Thread summaries may include citations that Copilot used in generating the summary. Clicking a citation (denoted by a number) will scroll down the thread to the cited email for you to view. This Copilot-generated summary of an email thread includes citations you can click to go to the source email. Howard Wen / IDG Getting a summary when sharing a Word doc (business plans only) If you have Copilot with a Microsoft 365 business plan, you can use Copilot to generate a summary of a Word document when you share it with your co-workers. This summary is inserted as a passage of text inside the message that your co-workers receive inviting them to collaborate on the document. With the document open in Word, click the Share button toward the upper right. On the Share panel that opens, click the Copilot icon inside the lower right of the “Add a message” composition box. The AI will generate and insert the summary. You can edit the summary before you send out the invite. Related: Copilot for Microsoft 365 deep dive: Productivity at a steep price Is Copilot for Microsoft 365 a lying liar? Microsoft cheat sheets: Dive into Windows and Office apps SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe