Microsoft has announced a significant Microsoft Copilot reorganization, merging its consumer and commercial Copilot teams into a single, unified artificial intelligence division. This structural shift, initiated in March 2026, highlights the company’s evolving strategy as it transitions Microsoft Copilot from a chat-based assistant into an execution-focused system of agentic workflows. By integrating AI more deeply into its software ecosystem, the tech giant aims to streamline user experiences, eliminate product confusion, and build its own frontier AI models to ensure long-term self-sufficiency.
Leadership Restructuring and the Push for Superintelligence
The Microsoft Copilot reorganization follows the retirement announcement of long-time executive Rajesh Jha, who is stepping down after 35 years at the company. In the wake of his departure, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella detailed a new leadership structure designed to accelerate the company’s AI ambitions. The newly unified Copilot system will span four connected pillars: the Copilot experience, the Copilot platform, Microsoft 365 apps, and AI models.
Under the new framework, Jacob Andreou has been appointed as Executive Vice President of Copilot. Andreou will lead the combined consumer and commercial Copilot experience, driving product design and engineering. He reports directly to Nadella, with a dotted line to Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman. Meanwhile, Ryan Roslansky, Perry Clarke, and Charles Lamanna have been tapped to collectively lead Microsoft 365 applications and the broader Copilot platform.
This leadership shuffle is specifically intended to free up Mustafa Suleyman to focus entirely on Microsoft’s superintelligence efforts. Suleyman will spend the next five years developing world-class, in-house AI models. This initiative is designed to make Microsoft more self-sufficient, allowing the company to build enterprise-tuned models that drastically reduce the cost of serving AI workloads. A recent renegotiation of Microsoft’s deal with OpenAI now allows the company to independently pursue artificial general intelligence, paving the way for these internal developments. To further bolster this effort, Microsoft recently hired Ali Farhadi, the former CEO of Ai2, to serve as a corporate vice president under Suleyman.
Copilot Wave 3: Transitioning from Insight to Action
A central theme of the restructuring is the evolution of Copilot’s capabilities, officially rolling out as part of Microsoft 365 Copilot Wave 3. Microsoft is actively shifting Copilot from an AI that merely answers questions to an autonomous system that can execute complex, multi-step tasks.
As part of this transition, Microsoft unveiled Copilot Cowork, a new tool integrated with Anthropic’s Claude AI platform. Currently in a research preview, Copilot Cowork transforms the AI into an active helper capable of operating independently across the Microsoft 365 suite. Users can assign complex objectives, and the AI will search across applications like Teams, Outlook, and Excel to formulate an action plan.
The tool runs safely in a protected, sandboxed cloud environment to handle tasks such as rescheduling calendar events to create focus time, creating project pitch decks, or summarizing client research. For example, Cowork can prepare for an upcoming customer meeting by automatically generating a slide deck using information pulled from recent emails, meetings, and shared files. The system offers checkpoints along the way, allowing users to pause the action or make changes without giving up control.
Native Workflows and the Power Platform Integration
Microsoft’s AI expansion also extends deeply into enterprise development tools. The company is embedding Microsoft 365 Copilot directly into model-driven Power Apps, allowing users to query data, generate visualizations, and execute tasks without leaving their application environment.
This update introduces object-centric process mining within Power Automate. This new method analyzes enterprise processes by capturing events across multiple interconnected business objects, such as orders, invoices, and payments. This approach provides organizations with better visibility into workflow bottlenecks and compliance gaps that traditional models might miss.
Additionally, the company is leaning heavily into AI governance and enterprise administration. On May 1, 2026, Microsoft will launch Agent 365, a new management platform acting as a control plane for organizations to monitor and govern custom AI agents. Agent 365 will cost $15 per user per month. On the same day, Microsoft will release the new Microsoft 365 First Frontier Suite E7 bundle for $99 per user per month, which packages advanced security and compliance tools alongside Copilot and Agent 365.
By unifying its internal teams and expanding its native AI capabilities, Microsoft is positioning Copilot as an integrated execution layer for both individual consumers and large-scale enterprises.
