What’s new for Copilot – March 2026

March 2026 continued to push the boundaries of what AI can do across the Microsoft ecosystem. From productivity enhancements to deeper integrations, there was genuinely a lot to take in.

A few updates stood out to me as particularly impactful. First, the arrival of Anthropic Claude Sonnet as a selectable model within Microsoft 365 Copilot. On a similar note, the General Availability of Federated Copilot Connectors opens up some exciting possibilities, allowing Copilot to securely pull real-time data from third-party sources like Canva, HubSpot, and Google Calendar using MCP, without storing any of that data in Microsoft services. Finally, the new agentic email drafting experience in Outlook, where Copilot now works conversationally alongside you to draft, refine, and format emails.

Continue reading to know about everything that landed in March.

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Hands-On Microsoft 365 Pulse – Weekly Updates (Week 13)

I’ve just come back from a week on the Microsoft campus, where a lot of upcoming Microsoft 365 updates were shared in the context of the MVP program. Most of it is still under NDA, so I can’t go into details yet, but as features begin to roll out publicly, I’ll cover them here.

Last week was also a special one for us as a family. Both my wife and I are Microsoft MVPs, and we work with SharePoint every day. When the second SharePoint Hackathon came around, we decided to participate together. We won the category for Best SharePoint Mobile Experience and were finalists for Best SharePoint Design, if you want to see what we’ve built watch the video below.

Microsoft 365 Pulse

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Hands-On Microsoft 365 Pulse – Weekly Updates (Week 12)

I’m writing this week’s Pulse from Redmond, on the Microsoft campus, where I’m attending the MVP Summit. Today is also my birthday, and it’s one of those moments that lands as both a privilege and a tradeoff. I’m excited to be here with this community, but I’d be lying if I said it isn’t a bit bittersweet not being at home with my family.

The Summit is hard to explain without it sounding like hype, so I will keep it simple. It is a week where Microsoft and the community are in the same loop. Product groups share where things are going, and MVPs push back with the reality of implementation. That combination is what makes this worth the travel.

I will not be able to share everything I’m learning right away. Sessions are confidential and are simply not meant to be repeated outside the room. But it still matters, because it makes me better at what I do when I’m back at work, and it shapes the way I filter and explain the constant stream of updates that you see in this Pulse.

Microsoft 365 Pulse Updates

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Hands-On Microsoft 365 Pulse – Weekly Updates (Week 11)

This week’s Pulse looks a little different. Microsoft wrapped up the second SharePoint Hackathon, and instead of just watching from the sidelines, I decided to participate. This time with my wife. She is a former Microsoft employee and now a Copilot Microsoft MVP, so yes, we genuinely live and breathe Microsoft at home.

We joined forces to push the boundaries of what SharePoint can do using mostly out of the box capabilities. If you remember the days when the goal was to make SharePoint not look like SharePoint, this one is for you. If you want to catch up on the latest SharePoint updates and see where the platform is heading, take a look and let us know what you think.

SharePoint hackathon

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Hands-On Microsoft 365 Pulse – Weekly Updates (Week 10)

Microsoft 365 had a slow start to the year. January and February felt unusually quiet. March changed that completely. With the Copilot Wave 3 announcements made yesterday, it is clear Microsoft has shifted gears. The pace picked up fast, and the scope of what was announced signals another major change in how we work.

Agents are at the center of that shift. This is no longer about experimentation or shiny demos. They are reaching a level of maturity where they become genuinely useful, dependable, and close to everyday work. More support than feature. More right arm than assistant. That is why my highlights this week focus on two updates that really matter: Anthropic Claude Sonnet now available in Microsoft 365 Copilot, and Microsoft Agent 365 now generally available, finally giving admins a place to set boundaries and control in this new agent-driven world.

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Hands-On Microsoft 365 Pulse – Weekly Updates (Week 9)

Today, SharePoint turns 25. I couldn’t let this moment pass without sharing what the platform has meant to my own career, and how deeply it shaped the way I work, write, and share what I learn with all of you.

February is already in the rear‑view mirror, which means one thing: another February blog post marathon is done. This year, that resulted in 28 new posts, published one per day, covering everything from SharePoint and Microsoft Teams to Lists, Copilot, and Microsoft Places. Places deserves a special mention, it’s an area I hadn’t really explored on the blog before, and February gave me the excuse to finally change that.

Microsoft 365 Pulse Updates

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What’s new for Copilot – February 2026

After a relatively quiet month, Copilot is back in full swing. February brought updates across almost every Microsoft 365 app, and the pace feels familiar again.

As in previous roundups, I’m focusing on the smaller changes that actually make a difference. One of them is the ability to turn Copilot Pages into SharePoint news posts, making it easier to take AI‑generated content, refine it, and publish it where it belongs. Another is the unification of grounding tools and sources under a single plus menu in Copilot Chat, a subtle change that reduces friction for everyday use.

On the admin side, branding Copilot helps reinforce that users are working inside a trusted organizational space. There’s more to cover this month, but these updates already show how Copilot is quietly becoming easier, clearer, and more practical to use.

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February 2026 Marathon – 28 Days, 28 Blog Posts

After a year without the tradition, I decided to bring it back. Twenty-eight blog posts in twenty-eight days, one every single day of February, covering Microsoft 365 across SharePoint, Microsoft Teams, Microsoft Lists, Copilot, and this year with quite a few posts about Microsoft Places too.

I’ve done this challenge before, but this one was the hardest to finish. Not because I didn’t have enough to write about, I still have a backlog of over 100 post ideas sitting in a list waiting, but two things made pushing through genuinely tough this time.

February Blog Post Marathon

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Hands-On Microsoft 365 Pulse – Weekly Updates (Week 8)

The past week brought two SharePoint updates that are worth paying attention to. The first is the arrival of Ground Chat in SharePoint Lists, powered by Context IQ, which starts to change how people interact with structured data inside Microsoft 365. The second is the announcement of a new SharePoint experience, timed neatly with the product’s 25th anniversary and clearly signalling where Microsoft wants the platform to go next.

On a more personal note, the blog post marathon got tougher toward the end of last week. I was sick, keeping up with the daily publishing cadence took more effort than expected, and promotion fell by the wayside. The posts still went out, just a little more quietly than usual. If you’ve been following the marathon, below is everything I’ve published since the last Microsoft 365 Pulse update. I hope you find something useful in there.

Hands-On Pulse

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Microsoft 365 profile cards now support user information from third party systems

Microsoft 365 profile cards are one of the most consistently used surfaces across the platform. They appear in Outlook, Teams, SharePoint, Microsoft Search, and Copilot. Despite that reach, the information shown has historically been limited to a small set of identity‑centric attributes.

Microsoft has now expanded this model. Organizations can surface additional user information on profile cards and populate that data not only from Microsoft Entra ID, but also from third‑party systems, most commonly HR platforms.

Microsoft Profile Cards

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I've been working with Microsoft Technologies over the last ten years, mainly focused on creating collaboration and productivity solutions that drive the adoption of Microsoft Modern Workplace.

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