If you’ve heard about SharePoint agents—or are just stumbling across them for the first time—you’re in the right place. In this blog, we’ll cover what SharePoint agents are, what they can do for your organization, their availability, and what you need to know about pricing and more.
SharePoint agents act as natural language AI assistants, customized to specific tasks and subject areas, delivering trustworthy and accurate answers and insights to inform decisions. Every SharePoint site contains an agent built on its own content, or, with a single click, users can create and share a custom agent that only accesses the information they choose. Whether employees rely on these out-of-the-box agents or develop their own, they gain precise, pertinent responses that support effective decision-making.
SharePoint agents offer numerous benefits, including increased efficiency, improved accuracy, and enhanced collaboration. By automating routine tasks, these agents free up valuable time for employees to focus on more strategic initiatives. Additionally, they help ensure consistency and compliance by following predefined rules and workflows.
Common use cases for SharePoint agents include:
Streamlined employee onboarding: New hires often have dozens of questions about how to find documents or request access to teams. A SharePoint agent can answer these questions and guide them to the right information.
Internal help desk: Instead of emailing IT or HR for common queries like “How do I reset my password?” or “Where can I find the new expense policy?”, employees can ask the Agent and get immediate answers (or directions).
Budget planning: The SharePoint Agent can provide recommendations and prioritizations for the upcoming planning cycle, and reduces time intensive analysis and costly margins of error so the team can focus on strategic financial planning.
SharePoint agents operate by integrating with the SharePoint environment and utilizing its APIs and services. They can be configured to perform specific tasks based on triggers, such as changes to documents or user actions. These agents use predefined rules and workflows to carry out their tasks, ensuring that processes are executed consistently and accurately.
The agents can be managed and monitored through a central interface, allowing administrators to track their performance and make adjustments as needed. This centralized management helps ensure that the agents operate efficiently and effectively, minimizing the risk of errors and downtime.
SharePoint agents come with a range of features and capabilities designed to enhance the functionality and efficiency of the SharePoint environment.
Powered by the same AI technology as Microsoft 365 Copilot, these agents operate within the secure boundaries of Microsoft 365, maintaining high standards of data privacy and security. SharePoint agents adhere to existing SharePoint user permissions and aforementioned labels to ensure data is protected and help prevent the oversharing of sensitive information. Users still only have access to the files they are authorized to view or edit.
SharePoint site owners will be able to manage agents in the following ways:
Only people who create and have edit permissions to the site will be able to create and edit customized agents. This leverages the same permission model already working in SharePoint, so that users who are closest to the knowledge on the site can create agents that improve their daily work. Regular editors can create their own agents, but only site owners can set the agent for their site, as well as other agents featured for everyone else.
With Microsoft Copilot Studio integration, you can customize these agents further with third-party sources, actions, and automation workflows. You can then publish the agent to the Teams app catalog.
Figure 1: Microsoft Copilot Studio web page
On a SharePoint site, you can find the site agent from the Copilot icon on the right side of the ribbon at the top. This agent’s name defaults to the same as the site name, and will be at the top of the “Approved for this site” list.
Figure 2: Default agent scoped to a SharePoint site
For specific projects or tasks, any SharePoint user can create a customized agent based on the relevant files, folders, or sites, with just one click.
You can create SharePoint agents from these three entry points:
SharePoint agents began rolling out in late November 2024 and are expected to achieve 100% availability in January 2025. You can get access to SharePoint agents with a Microsoft 365 Copilot license. Alternatively, if your tenant is licensed for Microsoft Copilot Studio consumption billing, SharePoint agents will soon be available to users as a pay-as-you-go meter.
Coming soon, through the Microsoft 365 admin center, admins will also be able to manage consumption billing for SharePoint agents.
Who can create SharePoint agents?
Anyone with edit permissions on a SharePoint site can create agents. This includes site owners, editors, members,
or admins, depending on the permissions set within SharePoint.
What is the difference between an agent in SharePoint and an agent made with Microsoft Copilot Studio?
SharePoint agents allow site editors to quickly define an agent tailored to their specific team or projects directly within SharePoint. In comparison, creating an agent in Copilot Studio enables you to use content from SharePoint or OneDrive as sources, as well as other sources.
What files are supported by SharePoint agents?
Currently, the following file types are supported:
Support for the following file formats is coming soon:
The future of SharePoint Agents looks promising, with ongoing advancements in artificial intelligence and machine learning expected to further enhance their capabilities. Future developments may include more sophisticated automation, improved integration with other enterprise systems, and enhanced analytics and reporting features.
Many organizations need precise and trusted AI responses, deeper controls, enhanced governance, flexible AI model choices, and more granular customization. That’s where Atlas Fuse steps in.
Copilot SharePoint Agents* |
|
Atlas Fuse |
Content Length/Indexing: Very lengthy documents (e.g., 100+ pages) may not be fully indexed despite being under the size limit. Summaries: ~80,000 words • Q&A: ~7,500 words • Rewrites: ~3,000 words. E.g., the equivalent to 15-20 pages of a document. |
|
Content Length/Indexing: Indexes all content from each file without omission. Documents ranging from 500 to 1000 pages of high text density have been processed successfully (with processing time capped at 1 hour, depending on hardware allocation). |
File Format Support: DOC, DOCX, PPT, PPTX, XLSX, PDF, TXT, RTF, ASPX, HTM, HTML, ODT, ODP |
|
File Format Support: : DOCX, PPTX, XLSX, PDF, TXT, ASPX, HTML, MP4 (Transcripts), WEBM (Transcripts) |
Content Scope: Indexes content only from SharePoint document libraries/pages, folders, and files. Does not index SharePoint lists. |
|
Content Scope: Indexes content from SharePoint Document/Pages Libraries and SharePoint Lists and can even index public webpages. |
Content Targeting: Targets content based solely on file path (no metadata-based filtering). |
|
Content Targeting: Allows targeting content not only by path but also through metadata and taxonomy filters using a search query, enabling precise selection based on labels, naming, or keywords in the indexed metadata from the AI Assistant interface. |
LLM Content Prioritization: Tends to emphasize content at the beginning and end of documents, potentially missing key details from the middle. |
|
LLM Content Prioritization: Uses a hybrid search approach (vector + keyword) that prioritizes and retrieves relevant document chunks from anywhere within the document, ensuring that all relevant information is considered regardless of its position in the source. |
Indexing Latency: New content may not be immediately available due to indexing delays inherent in scheduled indexing cycles. |
|
Indexing Latency: Higher than copilot, managed by a manual trigger or a daily incremental scheduled sync. |
* We provide information that is accurate at the time of publishing, but the pace of change is such that any information provided or views expressed may be outdated in a matter of weeks, so always check whether the content you are reading has been superseded.
A brief description which highlights the value of the offer and how it addresses the visitor's needs, interests or problems. Bullet points are a great way to show what they will be getting from the offer whilst italics and bold text can emphasize key points.