Microsoft Places: Using AI for flexible work | Microsoft 365 Blog (2024)

The moments that matter

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People continue to want flexibility at work—our research shows that nearly half (48%) of global employees are likely to ask their direct manager for a more flexible work schedule or location in the next year.1 But maintaining connection in flexible work takes work. Organizations that don’t actively bring people together for moments that matter put connection at risk: 43% of employees feel disconnected from their company.1 The tension between flexibility and connection at work isn’t new and therefore requires an innovative solution. AI innovation is already improving how you work; improving where you work is the next opportunity. With Microsoft Places, an app that reimagines flexible work, AI can make coordinating in-office time and connecting with coworkers even easier.

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Microsoft Places

Join the Public Preview program for the new connected workplace app that reimagines flexible work.

In addition to fostering improved coordination and connection, Places optimizes the effectiveness and engagement of the workplace. Importantly, Places features are accessible across surfaces you regularly use for coordination and collaboration, like Outlook and Microsoft Teams, so flexible work coordination and connection can happen within your normal flow of work. 

Coordinate when and where you come into the office

Scheduling in-office time with coworkers and planning ahead to book rooms and a desk are regularly cited challenges for flexible teams. When employees get to the office, they don’t want to be greeted by a sea of empty desks—they want facetime with their manager and the coworkers they collaborate with most frequently. Nearly half (49%) of global knowledge workers have struggled with this situation over the past year.1

With Places, you can more easily coordinate across coworkers and spaces in the office. Places location plan allows you to set and share your proposed location schedule with coworkers while also viewing their plans.

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Updating or adjusting your location is always available within the Places app, but it’s also accessible within your regular flow of work in the Outlook Calendar. With a click, you can adjust your schedule and access the peek card—which shows your closest collaborators who plan to come in and allows quick access to space booking—for more information. There is also a link on the peek card that allows you to see all coworkers schedules in the Places app.

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In addition to coordinating schedules with coworkers, you can easily see your manager’s schedule expectations too. With team guidance in Places, managers communicate which days their team should plan to be in the office and what the priorities are for each in-office day. Providing a purpose for team days in the office gives you another reason to come into the office.

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The integration of Places data into Microsoft Copilot will make coordination even easier. Coming in the second half of 2024, you will be able to use Copilot to understand which days are best to come into the office. Copilot will even share reasons why certain days are best to come in, highlighting things like in-person meetings, your manager’s planned attendance, or if most of your coworkers are planning to be in the office. You will be able to ask Copilot to adjust your schedule based on this information—changing your work location to the office on recommended days and rescheduling in-person meetings.

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Microsoft Places: Using AI for flexible work | Microsoft 365 Blog (10)
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After you’ve decided which days to come in, you’ll need to find the right spaces for your meetings and focused work. From software to hardware, Microsoft offers an end-to-end booking solution that provides an improved workplace experience. Starting with the Places finder, accessible in Outlook, you can now search for rooms and desks and receive additional information to guide your booking decision. Places finder shows images of the room or desk pool, includes a map of where the space is in the office, and offers details about available technology or other amenities. Places finder can be enhanced when combined with other workplace experiences from Microsoft and our device partners. With Teams, users can take advantage of bookable desk capabilities that allow users to walk up to a shared work desk, connect their laptop to the monitor, and reserve the spot automatically.

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In your Calendar, Places also provides helpful reminders if no rooms or desks have been booked for an in-office day. You can click on the location pin in Calendar to bring up the peek card and browse suggestions for desks and rooms that best meet your needs for the day.

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End-to-end booking will be further enhanced with Copilot in the second half of 2024. Building on booking suggestions Copilot managed booking will find and book the right space for the needs of your meeting for recurring meetings where one room might not be available week-to-week.

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Enable more in-office connections

One of the perks of being in the office is an impromptu conversation with coworkers. With expanded presence, a new Places feature that appears across Microsoft 365 apps, you can see coworkers who are nearby. With awareness of who is around, quick chats can happen in-person or an overdue lunch can be scheduled. By adjusting presence to indicate when an employee is in the office or which building they’re in, coworkers easily see when they’re nearby.

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In Teams group chats, coworkers can see participant locations or type @nearby to notify those around them about an activity or change in the meeting room.

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It’s important to note that in making sure flexible work ‘works,’, all location data collection adheres to Microsoft stringent privacy standards. Opt-in and opt-out controls for expanded presence are available at both the tenant admin and user levels, are limited to signals about in-office locations, and will be aggregated and anonymized in reports about office occupation trends.

Confidently optimize the effectiveness of the workplace

IT Admins and Real Estate and Facilities (RE&F) professionals have encountered challenges in flexible work too. Static buildings haven’t kept pace with the evolving nature of how and where employees work. AI can play a role in improving the management of space by actively highlighting areas of opportunity for optimization.

Any decision about optimizing the workplace must start with an understanding of what spaces are available and how they are being used. Combining intent and actual occupancy patterns available in Places allows administrators to see a clearer picture of the space available and what’s actually needed.

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Unlocking the power of collaboration

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Utilization of spaces is another important input in managing the workplace. With more integrated check-in functionality for conference rooms and desk pools, administrators can adjust policies to automatically release unused rooms or desks that have been booked—creating clarity on actual utilization of bookable spaces. Microsoft delivers utilization insights and analytics across workplace products. In addition to device deployment and management capabilities, Microsoft Teams Rooms Pro Management provides valuable space and device utilization data for meeting and collaboration spaces and shared desks that can help validate intent data in Places.

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Microsoft Places: Using AI for flexible work | Microsoft 365 Blog (30)
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Coming in the second half of 2024, the data from Places will enable Copilot to provide additional intelligence to guide IT admins and RE&F professionals on how to manage and adapt space, like suggestions about consolidating floors on days with low occupancy, adjusting food services to avoid waste, or adding more huddle rooms to support new ways of working. Administrators will be able to run additional analysis on the connected workplace data they’ve collected to make even more informed decisions or better understand patterns and trends that exist. Adjustments can have a material impact on an organization’s operating budget and sustainability goals.

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Get started today

As we continue to build solutions across the connected workplace, we’re actively partnering withcompanies across this market. With Microsoft Places,we are starting with a subset of ecosystem of partners (listed below) who will build on top of the Places platform with new and existing solutions, leveraging and enhancing data related to people, location, and space. As Places capabilities grow and expand, so will the partner ecosystem.

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Places will be licensed as part of Microsoft Teams Premium, contributing to the Teams vision to build a smart workplace. Get started today with Places coordination and connection features and sign up for access to additional features. Copilot integrations will be available in the second half of 2024—improving where you work.

For the latest research insights on the future of work and generative AI, visit WorkLab.

1May2024 Work Trend Index survey, Microsoft.

Microsoft Places: Using AI for flexible work | Microsoft 365 Blog (2024)

FAQs

Does Microsoft 365 use AI? ›

Reinvent productivity with Copilot for Microsoft 365. Get more done faster with an AI assistant in your Microsoft 365 apps, documents, and meetings.

Is Microsoft Copilot better than ChatGPT? ›

You should use Microsoft Copilot if...

After reaching your GPT-4o limit, your chat session reverts to GPT-3.5, limited to generating conversational text and information only until January 2022. Meanwhile, Copilot can access the internet to deliver more current information than GPT-3.5, complete with links to sources.

How does Microsoft use artificial intelligence? ›

Across Microsoft 365, AI powers innovative apps that can help you write and design better, visualize maps and charts in Excel, and streamline your inbox. Learn how AI makes Office apps easier to use, more collaborative, and more secure.

What is Microsoft's AI tool called? ›

Achieve anything you can imagine with your everyday AI companion.

What are the concerns with Microsoft AI? ›

But the new AI device features have raised privacy concerns. In particular, one feature that Microsoft refers to as “Recall” allows the device to take snapshots of a person's screen every few seconds. These screenshots are encrypted and then stored locally on the individual's device.

Which AI is better than ChatGPT? ›

Best ChatGPT alternative

In February 2023, Microsoft unveiled a new AI-improved Bing, now known as Copilot. It runs on GPT-4 Turbo, which means that Copilot has the same intelligence as ChatGPT, which runs on GPT-4o.

Is Microsoft Copilot AI free? ›

Copilot helps you find the right information, create unique content, and get things done faster. To use the free version of Copilot, visit copilot.microsoft.com.

Will Microsoft Copilot be available for everyone? ›

Microsoft Copilot for Microsoft 365 is already generally available for enterprise customers since November 1, 2023. For educational staff, it is available from January 1, 2024, and for students aged 18 and above from May 15, 2024. For Microsoft 365 Personal and Family subscribers, Copilot Pro is purchasable.

How much does Microsoft Copilot cost? ›

The Copilot for Microsoft 365 plan costs $30 per user per month, or you can purchase the plan for $360 per year. You'll also still need a qualifying Microsoft 365 plan. Copilot for Microsoft 365 includes all the features of Copilot Pro, plus some extras.

Who runs Microsoft AI? ›

Who is Mustafa Suleyman, Microsoft's new AI chief, and what does his appointment mean for Big Tech? Euronews.

Is ChatGPT owned by Microsoft? ›

Microsoft doesn't own ChatGPT nor the company OpenAI which is founded by Chatgpt's CEO Sam Altman. but the both companies have been partnered commercially since 2016 so Microsoft continues to be the company's largest investor.

What is an example of Microsoft AI? ›

For example, when a media streaming service recommends what to watch or listen to next, it's using AI to analyze what you've watched or listened to in the past, filter all of the available options based on their attributes, and surface the option that's most likely to entertain you.

Who owns OpenAI? ›

The OpenAI ownership pie is divided between Microsoft (49%), other stakeholders (49%), and the original OpenAI non-profit foundation, which staunchly preserves its autonomy as the leading firm continues to write OpenAI history.

How does Microsoft seeing AI work? ›

Seeing AI is a Microsoft research project that brings together the power of the cloud and AI to deliver an intelligent app designed to help you navigate your day. Point your phone's camera, select a channel, and hear a description of what the AI has recognized around you.

What does GPT stand for? ›

What Is GPT? GPT stands for Generative Pre-training Transformer. In essence, GPT is a kind of artificial intelligence (AI). When we talk about AI, we might think of sci-fi movies or robots. But AI is much more mundane and user-friendly.

Does Microsoft teams use AI? ›

Microsoft IntelliFrame helps hybrid meeting attendees to see people in Teams Rooms more clearly, using Cloud AI to identify and capture individual video feeds of each in-room participant.

Does Microsoft use AI for customer service? ›

Copilot in Dynamics 365 Customer Service

Chat with AI-powered Copilot to diagnose issues, ask follow-up questions, and discover solutions. Draft personalized chat or email customer responses with the right tone. Generate content in context with live conversation and trusted support resources.

What is the best AI tool for Office 365? ›

One of the standout AI tools in Microsoft Office 365 is Copilot. Copilot works alongside you, embedded in the apps you use every day, to boost creativity and work more productively. Whether you're using Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, Teams, or Loop workspaces, Copilot is there to assist you.

Does Microsoft Forms use AI? ›

Microsoft Copilot in Forms is an AI-powered tool that helps you easily create surveys, polls, and other forms with that are relevant, engaging and effective. With Copilot in Forms, you can streamline your form creation process and get high-quality content in no time.

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