Mastering Teams Meetings with Copilot

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Make meetings shorter and more effective using AI.

Let’s be honest. Most meetings don’t fail because people don’t care. They fail because they’re bloated, unfocused, and forgettable.

We talk. We nod. We promise to “circle back”. Then everyone leaves and gets on with their real work… often without a clear idea of what was actually decided.

This is exactly where Copilot in Microsoft Teams earns its keep.

Copilot doesn’t magically fix bad meetings. But it does remove the friction that turns good discussions into wasted time. It captures what matters, summarises it clearly, and turns conversation into action—without you having to play the role of note‑taker, timekeeper, or meeting historian.

What Copilot Actually Does in Teams Meetings

During a Teams meeting, Copilot works alongside the live transcript. It’s not guessing. It’s listening to what’s being said and structuring it for you in real time or after the meeting ends.

That means Copilot can:

  • Generate clean summaries of long discussions

  • Identify key decisions (not just who talked the loudest)

  • Extract action items and who owns them

  • Answer questions like “What did I miss?” or “What was decided about X?”

The real benefit? You no longer need to stay in every meeting from start to finish just to stay informed.

Meetings Get Shorter (Because They Can)

Once people realise they don’t have to manually capture notes, meetings naturally change.

Instead of:

  • Repeating context “for the minutes”

  • Talking in circles to make sure something is written down

  • Staying late “just in case something important comes up”

Teams can focus on decisions and outcomes, knowing Copilot will handle the admin.

That alone can shave 10–15 minutes off most meetings, which adds up frighteningly fast over a week.

A Simple How‑To: Using Copilot in Your Next Meeting

You don’t need to redesign your meeting culture to start. Just do this:

  1. Start a Teams meeting as normal
    Make sure transcription is enabled (most organisations have this on by default).

  2. Open Copilot during the meeting
    Use it to ask things like:

    • “Summarise what’s been discussed so far”
    • “What decisions have been made?”
  3. After the meeting, ask for a summary
    Copilot can generate:

    • A short executive summary

    • A list of action items

    • Open questions or follow‑ups
  4. Share the summary with attendees
    Drop it straight into Teams chat or email. No rework required.

That’s it. No templates. No extra tools. No admin overhead.

The Real Power Move: Share the Impact

Here’s where most people stop—but you shouldn’t.

After your meeting, share what Copilot produced and call it out explicitly:

“This summary was generated by Copilot—no manual notes.”

Why? Because this is how adoption spreads.

When others see:

  • Clear summaries

  • Accurate action items

  • No missed details

They start asking how you did it. And suddenly, better meetings become contagious.

Copilot Doesn’t Replace You—It Backs You Up

Copilot isn’t there to run meetings for you. It’s there to remove the boring, error‑prone parts so you can focus on thinking, deciding, and moving work forward.

If your meetings matter, Copilot helps ensure they actually lead somewhere.

And if your meetings don’t matter? Well… at least they’ll be shorter.

AI Fluency Isn’t Optional Anymore – and Microsoft 365 Copilot Is Where It Starts

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There’s a quiet shift happening in workplaces right now.

It’s not about who knows the most tools.
It’s not about who can write the cleverest prompt.
And it’s definitely not about chasing the latest shiny AI platform every second week.

It’s about AI fluency.

More and more, I’m seeing decisions being made – hiring, promotion, even redundancy – based on one simple question:

Can this person actually work effectively with AI?

And here’s the part many people miss:
AI fluency isn’t about learning “AI”. It’s about embedding AI into the way you already work.

That’s why, for most businesses, Microsoft 365 Copilot should be the default starting point.


Phase 1: Foundations – Make Copilot the First Place You Go

The biggest mistake I see people make with AI is treating it like a special activity.

You “go and do AI”, then you go back to your real work.

That’s backwards.

The foundation of AI fluency is simple:
use AI everywhere you would normally think, search, write, or plan.

With Microsoft 365 Copilot, that means:

  • Drafting and refining emails directly in Outlook

  • Summarising meetings and actions in Teams

  • Turning rough ideas into structured documents in Word

  • Analysing data and trends inside Excel

  • Asking Copilot questions against your own tenant data, not the public internet

The habit you want to build is this:
If you’re already in Microsoft 365, Copilot is already there – use it.

No extra tabs.
No copy‑paste gymnastics.
No context switching.

That alone puts Copilot ahead of generic AI tools for day‑to‑day business use.


Phase 2: Copilot as a Coach, Not a Crutch

Early on, AI shouldn’t be doing your job for you.
It should be helping you think better about the job you’re already doing.

This is where Copilot shines inside Teams, Word, and OneNote.

Examples I see working well:

  • “Summarise this meeting and highlight risks I might have missed”

  • “Review this proposal and challenge my assumptions”

  • “What questions should I be asking before I send this to a client?”

  • “Turn these messy notes into a clear executive summary”

You’re still in control.
You’re still accountable.
Copilot is acting like a thinking partner that never gets tired.

That’s real productivity uplift – not AI theatre.


Phase 3: Copilot as a Worker (With You Still in the Loop)

Once the thinking habits are in place, then you let Copilot do more of the heavy lifting.

But not 100%.

The rule I use is simple:

  • You do the first 10% (direction and intent)

  • Copilot does the middle 80% (drafting, structuring, expanding)

  • You do the final 10% (judgement, tone, accuracy)

This works brilliantly for:

  • Reports and proposals in Word

  • Policy drafts and SOPs

  • Client updates

  • Internal documentation

  • Slide outlines for presentations

Copilot already understands your documents, your language, and your context because it’s working inside Microsoft 365 – not guessing from a blank prompt window.


Phase 4: Systems Beat Prompts

Prompt obsession is a trap.

What actually scales is repeatable systems.

Copilot naturally encourages this because it’s embedded in workflows:

  • Meeting → transcript → summary → action list

  • Email thread → summary → response draft

  • Document → critique → rewrite → final version

You’re not reinventing prompts every time.
You’re refining how you work.

That’s a massive difference, especially for teams.


Phase 5: Copilot as Infrastructure

This is where things get interesting.

When AI is built into the platform your business already runs on, it stops being a tool and starts becoming infrastructure.

Copilot connects across:

  • Outlook

  • Teams

  • SharePoint

  • OneDrive

  • Word, Excel, PowerPoint

All governed by your existing security, identity, and compliance controls.

That matters – especially for SMBs, regulated industries, and MSP-managed environments.

You don’t need ten different AI subscriptions.
You need one AI that understands your business context and respects your data boundaries.


The Bottom Line

AI fluency isn’t about knowing which AI is smartest this week.

It’s about choosing an AI that:

  • Fits naturally into how people already work

  • Reduces friction instead of adding it

  • Scales across teams, not just individuals

  • Works securely with business data

For most organisations, that AI is Microsoft 365 Copilot.


What’s Actually Happening to MSPs

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Every few months the same take does the rounds:

“MSPs are dying.” “AI will wipe out MSPs.” “The MSP model is broken.”

None of that is quite right.

MSPs aren’t dying.
They’re polarising.

What we’re watching isn’t a collapse — it’s a hard split into three very different realities. And if you don’t understand which one you’re talking to (or operating in), everything else you do — marketing, content, AI strategy, pricing — is noise.

Let’s frame this cleanly.


1. Legacy MSPs: The Majority (and the Dead End)

This is still most of the market.

Legacy MSPs compete on:

  • Seat price

  • RMM stacks

  • “We manage your IT” as a generic promise

Their business looks fine from the outside. In reality:

  • Margins are crushed

  • Staff are burnt out

  • Owners are trapped inside delivery

  • Every new tool adds complexity, not leverage

These businesses have no spare capacity — financially or cognitively — for:

  • AI adoption

  • Transformation projects

  • Training

  • Strategic change

They are running just fast enough not to fall over.

Here’s the uncomfortable truth:
These MSPs cannot be your target market.

Not for AI. Not for Copilot. Not for advisory. Not for transformation.

It doesn’t matter how good your content is. They don’t have the oxygen to act on it. Their problem isn’t awareness — it’s structural exhaustion.

Trying to “educate” this segment is a waste of time and energy.


2. Survival MSPs: The Loud Middle (and the False Signal)

This is the group most people think is “the market” — because they’re the ones talking.

You see them in communities. You see them in comments. You see them consuming content.

They are:

  • Intellectually aware they’re in trouble

  • Personally curious about AI

  • Smart, engaged, thoughtful individuals

But the business reality looks like this:

  • No discretionary budget

  • No mandate to change pricing or offers

  • No execution runway

They consume content as individuals, not as businesses.

That’s the trap.

They feel like a market.
They sound like a market.
They engage like a market.

But they don’t convert.

Not because they don’t want to — but because they can’t.

This group is where the “MSPs are dying” narrative comes from. And in a very real sense, it’s true — this segment is dying. Slowly. Quietly. Frustratingly.

They will tell you they’re “exploring AI”. They will attend webinars. They will save posts. They will nod along.

And then… nothing changes.

If your strategy relies on this group, you’re building on sand.


3. Post‑MSP Firms: The Quiet Minority That Already Moved

This is the group almost no one markets to properly — because they don’t self‑identify as MSPs anymore.

These firms have already started moving away from:

  • Per‑seat pricing

  • Pure support contracts

  • Tool‑centric value propositions

They sell:

  • Advisory

  • Governance

  • Compliance

  • Outcomes

They invest in:

  • Training

  • Capability

  • AI

  • Systems that reduce labour, not increase it

They don’t ask:

“How do we add Copilot to our stack?”

They ask:

“How do we redesign the business now that Copilot exists?”

Here’s the key insight most people miss:

These firms do not think of themselves as MSPs.

And that’s why traditional MSP messaging doesn’t land with them.

They’re not trying to save the MSP model.
They’ve already accepted it’s over.

They’re building something else.


The Real Shift (That No One Wants to Say Out Loud)

The market hasn’t disappeared.
The money hasn’t disappeared.
Demand hasn’t disappeared.

What’s disappeared is tolerance for undifferentiated IT support.

AI didn’t create this shift — it exposed it.

If your value is labour, AI compresses you.
If your value is outcomes, AI amplifies you.

This is why:

  • Content engagement is high but conversion is low

  • “AI curiosity” doesn’t turn into projects

  • MSPs feel stuck despite knowing the right answers

The industry isn’t waiting for better tools.

It’s waiting for fewer MSPs — and more firms willing to stop being one.


The Bottom Line

MSPs aren’t dying. They’re sorting themselves.

  • Legacy MSPs will grind until exit or burnout

  • Survival MSPs will talk, but not move

  • Post‑MSP firms will quietly compound advantage

If you’re building content, products, services, or communities, the question isn’t:

“How do we help MSPs survive?”

It’s:

“Who is already leaving — and how do we help them go faster?”

That’s where the future actually is.

GRC in a Nutshell – And How Microsoft 365 Actually Makes It Practical

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GRC is one of those acronyms that gets thrown around a lot, usually right before everyone in the room quietly switches off.

Governance, Risk Management, and Compliance sounds like paperwork, policy binders, and audit pain. But done properly, GRC is none of those things. It’s simply the mechanism that turns business intent into repeatable, defensible security outcomes.

And this is where Microsoft 365 quietly does a lot more heavy lifting than most organisations realise.

GRC isn’t about eliminating risk

Let’s get this out of the way early.

The goal of GRC is not to eliminate risk. That’s impossible. If your business uses email, cloud services, mobile devices, or people, risk exists.

What GRC is really about is:

  • Understanding what level of risk the business is willing to accept

  • Translating that appetite into practical controls

  • Measuring how well those controls are working

  • And getting explicit agreement on the residual risk that remains

That last point is critical. Security isn’t an IT problem — it’s a business decision. GRC gives the business a way to make that decision consciously, instead of by accident.

Governance: turning intent into guardrails

Governance is where most organisations stumble, because it’s often confused with documentation.

In reality, governance is simply the process of answering:

“How do we want things to work around here?”

In Microsoft 365, governance is expressed through configuration, not policy PDFs.

Examples:

  • Conditional Access defines who can access what, from where, and under what conditions
  • Intune defines how devices must be configured before they’re trusted

  • Sensitivity labels define how information is classified and handled

  • Retention policies define how long data should exist — and when it shouldn’t

This is governance as code. Once it’s configured, it applies consistently, silently, and at scale. No training session or reminder email can compete with that.

Risk management: making security measurable

Risk management is where GRC starts to pay for itself.

Instead of vague statements like “we take security seriously”, Microsoft 365 gives you evidence:

  • Secure Score shows how your tenant compares to recommended security baselines

  • Defender surfaces real‑world attack activity, not theoretical threats

  • Compliance Manager maps controls to recognised frameworks and highlights gaps

This matters because risk that isn’t measured can’t be discussed meaningfully with the business. Microsoft 365 turns risk into dashboards, trends, and improvement actions — which means security conversations can finally move beyond fear and anecdotes.

Compliance: a by‑product, not the goal

One of the biggest mistakes I see is organisations chasing compliance as the end goal.

Compliance should be the output of good governance and risk management, not the driver.

Microsoft 365 reflects this approach well. Whether you’re aligning to Essential Eight, ISO, or internal standards, the same core controls keep showing up:

  • Strong identity protection

  • Device compliance

  • Data classification and protection

  • Logging, auditing, and retention

When these are in place, compliance reporting becomes far less painful — because you’re proving what you already do, not scrambling to justify what you don’t.

Residual risk: the most important conversation

Here’s the part that rarely happens, but should.

After controls are implemented and compliance is measured, there will always be risk left over. Budget limits, usability trade‑offs, legacy requirements — they all create gaps.

GRC forces the right question:

“Are we comfortable accepting this remaining risk?”

Microsoft 365 makes that conversation possible because it provides clarity:

  • What’s protected

  • What isn’t

  • And what it would take to close the gap

That enables informed decisions instead of hand‑waving. Sometimes the answer is “yes, we accept that risk”. And that’s perfectly valid — as long as it’s a conscious choice.

Why this matters now

With Copilot, automation, and cloud‑first operations accelerating, risk is no longer something that can be managed annually or ad‑hoc.

Microsoft 365 gives organisations a living GRC platform:

  • Governance enforced through configuration

  • Risk surfaced through telemetry

  • Compliance evidenced continuously

The organisations that thrive won’t be the ones chasing perfect security. They’ll be the ones who understand their risk, manage it deliberately, and can explain — clearly — why they’ve made the choices they have.

And that, in a nutshell, is what GRC is supposed to do.

GRC mapped to Microsoft 365 (at a glance)

GRC Element What it means in plain English How Microsoft 365 supports it
Governance Define how the business wants security, access, and data handling to work. Conditional Access and identity controls set who can access what and under which conditions.
Intune enforces device standards. Sensitivity labels and retention policies define how data is
classified and handled across Exchange, SharePoint, OneDrive, and Teams.
Risk Management Identify, measure, and prioritise real security risks. Secure Score and Defender telemetry expose gaps and active threats. Intune and Entra ID reporting
provide visibility into configuration drift and access risk. Microsoft Sentinel and Defender XDR
(where used) correlate signals to show material risk rather than noise.
Compliance Demonstrate alignment to standards, regulations, or internal controls. Microsoft Purview Compliance Manager maps controls to frameworks and tracks implementation status.
Audit logs, eDiscovery, and retention provide evidence without manual data gathering. Built-in
compliance reporting supports regulatory and contractual requirements.
Residual Risk Explicitly accept what remains after controls are applied. Microsoft 365 reporting clarifies what is protected and what isn’t, allowing business leaders to
make informed trade-offs between usability, cost, and security.

Five Microsoft Teams features most people still aren’t using (but should be)

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Everyone uses Microsoft Teams.

Very few people use it well.

Most organisations I walk into are using Teams as a glorified chat tool with meetings bolted on the side. That’s fine… but it’s also leaving a huge amount of productivity on the table. The irony is that the features that save the most time are usually the least talked about, because they’re not flashy and they don’t sell licences.

So here are five lesser-known Microsoft Teams tips that actually make a difference in day-to-day work — especially for MSPs and busy IT teams who live in Teams all day.

No fluff. No theory. Just practical wins.


1. Save messages for later, not forever

If you’re using Teams chat as a to‑do list, you’re already behind.

Most people know you can Save a message (hover → three dots → Save), but hardly anyone actually uses it properly. Saved messages are searchable, centralised, and survive the chaos of busy channels.

Here’s the real productivity trick:

  • Save actionable messages immediately

  • Review them once a day

  • Unsave them when done

Think of Saved messages as your temporary inbox, not long-term storage. If it sits there for weeks, it’s noise, not productivity.

Pro tip: Search for saved in the Teams search bar to instantly pull them all up.


2. Turn off channel noise (selectively)

The biggest Teams lie is that everything needs your attention.

It doesn’t.

Most users either mute nothing (and drown) or mute everything (and miss important stuff). The smarter approach is channel‑level notifications.

Right‑click a channel → Channel notifications → Custom.

Set it so you only get notified for:

  • Mentions

  • Replies to threads you’ve participated in

  • Important channels only

This one change alone can claw back hours per week — especially in MSP environments where Teams sprawl is very real.


3. Use message links instead of “scroll up”

“See my message above.”

No. Just… no.

Every Teams message has a direct link. Right‑click → Copy link. Drop that link into chat, a ticket, or a document and suddenly context is preserved without anyone scrolling through 200 messages of noise.

This is gold for:

  • Service desk escalations

  • Internal handovers

  • Project discussions

If your team still says “scroll up”, this is an easy win to coach out.


4. Schedule messages (because you don’t need to interrupt people)

Most Teams messages don’t need to be sent now.

They need to be sent at the right time.

Scheduled messages let you write when it suits you and deliver when it suits the recipient. Right‑click the Send button → Schedule message.

This is brilliant for:

  • End‑of‑day thoughts you don’t want to forget

  • Early‑morning reminders without being “that person”

  • MSPs working across time zones

It’s a small feature, but it’s a big professionalism upgrade.


5. Use Teams search like a database, not a gamble

Teams search is wildly under‑used — mostly because people don’t know how powerful it actually is.

You can filter by:

  • Person

  • Date

  • Channel

  • Has files

  • Has links

Instead of “I think Dave mentioned this last week”, try:

from:Dave has:files

Once you treat Teams as a searchable knowledge base instead of a scrolling timeline, your reliance on “tribal memory” drops fast.


Final thought: Productivity isn’t about more tools

Microsoft keeps adding features. Most people keep ignoring them.

Productivity isn’t about learning everything Teams can do — it’s about mastering a small number of behaviours that remove friction from your day.

If you implement even two of these tips across your team, you’ll feel the difference almost immediately.

And if Teams still feels overwhelming after that?
That’s not a technology problem.

That’s a habits problem.

Why AI Doesn’t Give the Same Answer Twice (And Why That’s Not a Bug)

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One of the most common frustrations I hear from people using AI is this:

“I asked it the same question yesterday and got a different answer today.”

And usually that’s followed by:

“So… which one is right?”

This is where most people run head‑first into a concept they weren’t expecting: AI is probabilistic, not deterministic.

That sounds technical. It isn’t. But it does change how you should think about using AI.

Deterministic vs probabilistic (in plain English)

A deterministic system works like a calculator.

  • 2 + 2 = 4

  • Every time

  • Forever

Same input. Same output. No surprises.

Traditional software works this way. Code is written, rules are defined, and the system follows them exactly. That’s why accounting systems, payroll, and databases behave predictably. They have to.

AI doesn’t work like that.

AI is probabilistic. That means it doesn’t calculate “the answer”. It calculates the most likely next word, then the next, then the next — based on probabilities.

Think less calculator and more very well‑read human.

AI is making an educated guess (every single time)

When you type a prompt into an AI system, it isn’t “looking up” an answer. It’s generating a response based on:

  • Patterns it learned during training

  • The context of your prompt

  • The words it has already generated

  • Statistical likelihoods

Each word is chosen because it’s likely, not because it’s guaranteed.

That’s why:

  • You won’t always get the same response twice

  • Wording matters more than people expect

  • Small changes in prompts can produce big changes in results

This isn’t a flaw. It’s literally how the system works.

Why this confuses people

Most of us have spent our entire digital lives interacting with deterministic systems.

  • Search engines return ranked results

  • Forms either submit or error

  • Software either works or crashes

So when AI gives us a plausible but slightly different answer, our brain goes:

“Hang on… which one is correct?”

The answer is often: both could be reasonable.

AI isn’t trying to be a source of absolute truth. It’s trying to be a useful collaborator.

Prompts are instructions, not questions

This is the biggest mindset shift.

If you treat AI like Google and just “ask a question”, you’ll get inconsistent results and frustration.

If you treat AI like a new employee who wants to help but lacks context, things improve dramatically.

That employee:

  • Is smart

  • Has read a lot

  • Doesn’t know your business

  • Doesn’t know what “good” looks like to you

So the quality of the output depends heavily on the quality of your instructions.

Because the system is probabilistic, vague instructions lead to vague (or unpredictable) outcomes.

Why structure reduces randomness

Good prompting doesn’t remove probability — but it constrains it.

Clear prompts:

  • Reduce ambiguity

  • Narrow the range of possible responses

  • Increase consistency

For example:

  • “Summarise this” → wide range of outcomes

  • “Summarise this in 5 bullet points for a non‑technical audience, focusing on business impact” → much tighter results

You’re not forcing the AI to be deterministic. You’re guiding the probabilities in your favour.

The real risk: false certainty

The most dangerous mistake isn’t that AI is probabilistic.

It’s that people forget it is.

AI responses often sound confident, polished, and authoritative — even when they’re wrong, incomplete, or missing context.

That’s why:

  • You should always review outputs

  • You shouldn’t blindly trust first drafts

  • Human judgement still matters

AI is brilliant at drafting, summarising, ideation, and acceleration.

It is not a replacement for thinking.

The takeaway

If you remember one thing, make it this:

AI doesn’t give you the answer.
It gives you a likely answer.

Your job isn’t to demand certainty from a probabilistic system.

Your job is to:

  • Give clearer instructions

  • Provide better context

  • Review and refine the output

When you do that, AI stops feeling unpredictable — and starts feeling powerful.

And once you understand that shift, everything about prompting suddenly makes a lot more sense.

If You Check Email More Often Than You Prompt AI, You’re Probably Falling Behind

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Here’s a simple, uncomfortable question.

How many times today have you checked your email or scrolled social media…
versus how many times you’ve deliberately prompted AI?

If the answer is “a lot more email”, you’re probably not just distracted.
You’re likely falling behind.

Not because email is evil.
Not because LinkedIn is a waste of time.
But because the way work gets done has fundamentally shifted — and many people haven’t adjusted their habits yet.

Attention Is No Longer the Bottleneck

For years, productivity advice focused on managing attention:

  • Inbox zero

  • Notification control

  • Time blocking

  • Focus modes

All useful. All still relevant.

But AI changes the equation.

The real bottleneck now isn’t attention — it’s leverage.

AI tools like Microsoft 365 Copilot don’t just save time.
They compress thinking, drafting, analysing, summarising, and planning into minutes instead of hours.

Every time you don’t use them for a task they’re good at, you’re choosing a slower path by default.

And speed compounds.

Email Is Reactive. AI Is Generative.

Checking email is reactive work.

You’re responding to other people’s priorities, context, and framing. Even when it’s important, it’s rarely leverage-heavy.

Prompting AI is generative work.

You’re:

  • Creating first drafts instead of staring at blank pages

  • Summarising weeks of emails instead of rereading them

  • Turning messy thoughts into structured plans

  • Extracting actions instead of manually parsing information

One creates momentum.
The other mostly maintains motion.

If you’re opening Outlook out of habit but only opening Copilot when you “have time”, you’ve inverted the value equation.

The New Baseline Is “AI-First” Thinking

High performers aren’t using AI as a novelty anymore. They’re using it as a default interface to work.

Before they:

  • Write a document

  • Respond to a complex email

  • Prepare for a meeting

  • Analyse data

  • Draft a proposal

They ask AI first.

Not for the final answer — but for acceleration.

This isn’t about replacing thinking.
It’s about removing friction from thinking.

The same way calculators didn’t make accountants dumb, AI won’t make professionals lazy. But refusing to use it will make you slow.

MSPs: This Gap Is Already Showing

In the MSP world, this gap is becoming obvious.

Some teams are:

  • Using Copilot to generate SOPs

  • Summarising tickets and incidents automatically

  • Creating customer-ready reports in minutes

  • Turning compliance frameworks into action plans quickly

Others are still:

  • Manually writing everything

  • Copying and pasting between tools

  • “Getting to it later”

  • Complaining they’re too busy to learn AI

The irony?
The people “too busy” to prompt AI are usually the ones who need it the most.

Prompting Is a Skill — and It Needs Reps

Here’s the part many miss.

Prompting AI isn’t magic.
It’s a skill.

And like any skill, it improves with repetition.

If you only prompt AI once or twice a day, you’ll never build fluency.
If you prompt it dozens of times, it becomes second nature.

You stop thinking:

“Should I use AI for this?”

And start thinking:

“How should I ask AI to help with this?”

That mental shift is where the real productivity gains live.

A Simple Rule of Thumb

Try this for a week.

Every time you feel the urge to:

  • Check email

  • Refresh Teams

  • Scroll LinkedIn

Ask yourself one question first:

“Is there something I could prompt AI to move forward right now?”

Draft. Summarise. Plan. Refine. Analyse.

You don’t need perfect prompts.
You just need to start.

Because the real risk isn’t AI getting things wrong.

It’s you not using it at all while others quietly build an advantage.

Falling Behind Is Quiet — Until It Isn’t

Nobody sends an alert saying:

“You’re now less productive than your peers.”

It happens gradually.

Others deliver faster.
They think clearer.
They respond sharper.
They scale themselves.

And one day, it’s obvious.

So if you’re checking your inbox twenty times a day but only prompting AI once or twice…

That’s not a productivity strategy.

That’s a warning sign.