Your 15‑Minute Daily M365 Power Routine

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“Transform your day in 15 minutes.”

Most people don’t have a productivity problem.
They have a starting problem.

The day kicks off reactively. Emails, Teams pings, half‑finished tasks from yesterday, and suddenly it’s 11am and you’re already behind. Not because you’re lazy or disorganised, but because you never took control of the day before it took control of you.

That’s where this comes in.

This is a simple, repeatable 15‑minute Microsoft 365 power routine you can run every morning. No new tools. No fancy systems. Just using what you already have – properly.

Do this consistently and you’ll stop feeling busy and start feeling deliberate.


The Rule

Before you touch email properly.
Before you open your tenth Teams chat.
Before you let someone else’s urgency define your priorities.

You run the routine.

Every. Single. Morning.


Minute 1–3: Outlook “My Day” – Reality Check

Open Outlook and bring up My Day.

This is where most people already go wrong. They either ignore their calendar completely or treat it as a suggestion rather than a commitment.

Look at:

  • Today’s meetings

  • Gaps between meetings

  • The real amount of time you actually have available

This isn’t about optimism. It’s about honesty.

If your calendar says you’ve got back‑to‑back meetings until 3pm, pretending you’ll “get some deep work done” before lunch is a lie you’ve told yourself too many times.

My Day shows you the truth. Accept it.


Minute 4–7: Microsoft To Do – Decide What Actually Matters

Now jump into Microsoft To Do.

Not your entire backlog.
Not your wish list.
Just today.

Ask one simple question:

“If I only got three things done today, what would move the needle?”

Flag or prioritise no more than three tasks. If everything is important, nothing is.

This is where most people sabotage themselves. They create a list that’s really just a guilt inventory. Don’t do that. Your job isn’t to remember everything. Your job is to progress the right things.

Everything else can wait.


Minute 8–10: Teams Check‑In – Reduce Noise Before It Starts

Send a short Teams check‑in.

This can be to:

  • Your team channel

  • A project chat

  • A key stakeholder

Something as simple as:

“Top priority today is X. I’ll be focused until lunch – ping me if urgent.”

This does two things:

  1. It sets expectations (which reduces interruptions)

  2. It forces clarity on your priorities

Most interruptions aren’t malicious. They’re caused by silence. A 60‑second message now can save you 20 distractions later.


Minute 11–15: Viva Insights – Protect Focus Time

Finally, open Viva Insights and block focus time.

Not “when I get a chance”.
Not “if the day allows”.

You schedule focus like you schedule meetings, because that’s what it is – an appointment with your most valuable asset: attention.

Even one 60–90 minute focus block changes the shape of the day. Without it, your time fragments. With it, work actually finishes.

If you don’t defend this time, nobody else will.


The Checklist (Save This)

Every morning:

  1. Review Outlook My Day

  2. Pick 3 priorities in To Do

  3. Send a Teams check‑in

  4. Block focus time with Viva Insights

That’s it.

No hacks. No dopamine tricks. Just discipline and consistency.


The Challenge

Follow this routine every morning for a week.

Not when you remember.
Not when it feels convenient.
Every morning.

Then ask yourself:

  • Did I feel more in control?

  • Did less work spill into the evening?

  • Did I stop reacting and start deciding?

If the answer is yes, you’ve just built a habit that scales better than any productivity app ever will.

If the answer is no, at least you’re now honest about how you’re starting your day.

Either way, you win.

Everyone Starts With a Tiny Audience. Interesting Thinking Is What Makes It Grow.

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If you’re an MSP staring at your blog stats, LinkedIn impressions, or newsletter subscriber count and thinking “What’s the point? No one’s listening anyway”, here’s the uncomfortable truth:

Everyone starts with a tiny audience.

Every voice you admire. Every “industry thought leader”. Every MSP you think has cracked content marketing. At some point, they were talking into the void just like you are now.

The difference isn’t timing, algorithms, or luck.
It’s whether they had something worth thinking about.

Small Audiences Aren’t the Problem. Boring Content Is.

Most MSPs quit content creation way too early. Not because it doesn’t work — but because it doesn’t work instantly.

They write three posts that say:

  • “Here are 5 Microsoft 365 security tips”

  • “Why cybersecurity matters more than ever”

  • “Why your business should move to the cloud”

And when nothing happens, they decide content “doesn’t work for MSPs”.

The reality? That content doesn’t work for anyone.

It’s safe. It’s generic. It’s been said a thousand times before — often better, louder, and by Microsoft themselves.

People don’t follow MSPs for recycled documentation.
They follow voices.

People Follow Thinking, Not Topics

This is where most MSP content goes wrong.

They focus obsessively on topics:

  • Microsoft 365

  • Security

  • Copilot

  • Backups

  • Compliance

But topics don’t build audiences.
Thinking does.

Two MSPs can write about the same tool. One gets ignored. The other gets shared. The difference isn’t technical accuracy — it’s perspective.

Interesting content answers at least one of these questions:

  • “Why does this matter now?”

  • “What’s wrong with how everyone else thinks about this?”

  • “What should I stop doing?”

  • “What am I over‑engineering?”

  • “What outcome am I actually chasing?”

When you give people something to think about, you earn attention. When you give them another checklist, you don’t.

Your First 100 Followers Don’t Need Perfection

Another trap MSPs fall into is waiting until their content is “good enough”.

They want:

  • Perfect graphics

  • Perfect SEO

  • Perfect posting cadence

  • Perfect confidence

That’s backwards.

Your first audience isn’t judging you. They’re forgiving you.
They’re early because they’re curious, not because they expect polish.

Your job early on isn’t to impress — it’s to experiment.

Try ideas. Try opinions. Try analogies. Try saying the thing you usually only say on a call with a client after the third coffee.

The worst thing you can do is sound like a vendor brochure while waiting for permission to be interesting.

Consistency Builds Trust. Ideas Build Growth.

Posting once a quarter with “high quality content” is a great way to stay invisible.

Consistency does two important things:

  1. It teaches the algorithm you exist.

  2. It teaches humans what your voice sounds like.

But consistency alone won’t grow your audience.
Ideas do.

You don’t need to post daily. You need to post deliberately.

One strong idea a week — clearly stated, confidently owned, and consistently reinforced — will outperform daily noise every time.

Growth doesn’t come from volume. It comes from recognition:

“Oh, that’s the MSP who always challenges how we think about security.”

“That’s the one who explains AI in plain English.”

“That’s the guy who focuses on outcomes, not tools.”

That’s how audiences compound.

Stop Trying to Sound Big. Start Sounding Honest.

Early‑stage MSP content fails because it tries to sound important instead of useful.

Big audiences don’t follow certainty.
They follow clarity.

Say what you’ve learned the hard way. Say what you’d do differently. Say what you think MSPs are getting wrong. Say what clients actually care about — not what vendors want you to repeat.

You don’t need to be the loudest voice in the room.
You need to be the clearest.

The Point Isn’t Going Viral. It’s Being Remembered.

Most MSPs don’t need millions of views. They need:

  • The right prospects

  • The right conversations

  • The right reputation

That doesn’t come from chasing virality.
It comes from building a body of work that makes people think “These people get it.”

Everyone starts with a tiny audience.

The MSPs who grow it aren’t louder.
They’re more interesting.

And interesting doesn’t mean controversial for the sake of it — it means thoughtful, opinionated, and anchored in real experience.

If you give people something worth thinking about, they’ll come back for more.

Automate Daily Microsoft 365 & Copilot Updates

Video URL = https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=knhtpCvfpko

Engaging Description:

In this video, I reveal my personal process for staying ahead of every change in Microsoft 365 and Copilot. Watch as I walk you through step-by-step how I use Copilot’s scheduling features to automate daily research, create custom briefings, and deliver updates straight to my inbox. I share insider tips on crafting powerful prompts, leveraging the Prompt Coach, and maximizing Co work for unlimited scheduled tasks. Whether you want daily newsletters, email briefings, or Teams posts, I show you how to set it all up for seamless, hands-free updates. If you’re ready to supercharge your productivity and never miss a Microsoft 365 or Copilot update again, this video is for you!

The Ultimate Teams Channel Guide for SMBs

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Is your Teams a mess? Fix it with these channel strategies.

Let’s be honest.
Most Microsoft Teams environments don’t fail because Teams is bad. They fail because no one ever decided how it should be used.

What starts as “we’ll just spin up a Team” quickly turns into channel sprawl, random tabs, duplicated files, and conversations scattered everywhere. Before long, people stop trusting Teams and fall back to email, private chats, or worse – asking, “Where’s that document again?”

The good news? You don’t need to rebuild everything. You just need a clear channel strategy.

This guide shows you how to structure channels, tabs, naming conventions, and integrated Planner/OneNote so Teams actually supports work instead of slowing it down.


First principle: Channels are for workstreams, not people

If your channels are named after people (“Bob”, “Accounts – Jane”) or vague concepts (“General 2”, “Random”, “Stuff”), you’ve already lost.

Channels should represent ongoing workstreams that have a shared outcome.

Good channel examples:

  • Sales Pipeline

  • Invoicing & Finance

  • Projects – Client A

  • Operations

  • Marketing Campaigns

Bad channel examples:

  • Bob

  • Misc

  • Old Stuff

  • Testing 123

A simple rule:
If the work would still exist if someone left the business, it deserves a channel.


Keep General boring (that’s a feature)

The General channel should not be a dumping ground.

Use it for:

  • Announcements

  • High-level updates

  • Links to key resources

  • Onboarding info

Do not use it for day-to-day work.
When everything happens in General, nothing stands out.


Naming conventions reduce friction (and arguments)

Consistency matters more than creativity.

Pick a naming pattern and stick to it:

  • Projects – Client Name

  • Projects – Internal

  • Admin – Finance

  • Admin – HR

This helps users instantly understand:

  • What type of work lives here

  • Whether the channel is operational, administrative, or project-based

You shouldn’t need training to find the right channel.


Tabs turn channels into workspaces

Most Teams are underpowered because channels are treated like chat rooms instead of workspaces.

Every active channel should have, at minimum:

  • Files – where the work lives

  • Planner – what needs to be done

  • OneNote – how things are done
Planner: make work visible

Add a Planner tab for:

  • Tasks

  • Ownership

  • Due dates

If it’s not in Planner, it’s not real work – it’s just a conversation.

OneNote: stop answering the same questions

Use OneNote tabs for:

  • Meeting notes

  • Process documentation

  • Decision logs

  • “How we do this” guides

This is how you reduce repeat questions and tribal knowledge.


Fewer channels, better behaviour

More channels do not mean better organisation.

As a rule of thumb:

  • 5–12 channels per Team is usually plenty

  • Archive or delete channels that are no longer active

  • Spin up a new Team when work becomes unrelated, not just “big”

If users are confused about where to post, you have too many options.


Guide + Checklist: fix one Team this week

Don’t boil the ocean. Start small.

Checklist:

  • Rename unclear channels

  • Move active work out of General

  • Add Planner and OneNote tabs to key channels

  • Remove unused tabs and channels

  • Agree on a simple naming convention

You’ll be surprised how quickly behaviour improves once structure exists.


Final challenge

Reorganise one Team this week and share a before/after screenshot.

Not for vanity.
For clarity.

Because Teams doesn’t need more features.
It needs better decisions.

If you want Teams to work, design it like a workspace – not a chat app.

Capability beats resources every single time

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Most organisations don’t fail because they lack tools, money or technology. They fail because they lack the capability to use what they already have to produce good outcomes.

That might sound blunt, but it’s one of the most consistent patterns I see across businesses, MSPs and IT teams.

They have Microsoft 365.
They have security products.
They have AI tools.
They have documentation, frameworks, policies and “best practice”.

And yet outcomes are poor.

Why? Because capability matters more than availability.

Having access is not the same as being capable

Modern business environments are stacked with resources. Cloud platforms, SaaS tools, automation, AI copilots, security dashboards — the list keeps growing.

But access to resources doesn’t magically translate into results.

Capability is what turns potential into performance.

Capability means:

  • Knowing what to use
  • Knowing when to use it
  • Knowing why it matters
  • And being able to apply it consistently under pressure

Without that, more tools just add more noise.

I’ve seen organisations buy premium licences, deploy advanced features, and still operate like nothing changed — because nobody actually knew how to use the capability to drive outcomes.

Outcomes don’t come from features — they come from execution

This is where many technology discussions go off the rails.

The focus shifts to:

  • “What features do we have?”

  • “What licence do we need?”

  • “What tool should we buy next?”

Instead, the better question is: What outcome are we trying to achieve, and do we have the capability to get there?

Security is a perfect example.

Buying security tools doesn’t make you secure.
Configuring policies once doesn’t make you resilient.
Compliance frameworks don’t implement themselves.

Outcomes like reduced risk, faster recovery, safer users and better decision‑making only happen when people understand how to use the tools as part of a system, not as isolated checkboxes.

Capability is a multiplier

Resources on their own are static. Capability is a force multiplier.

Two organisations can have the same tools and budgets, yet one dramatically outperforms the other. The difference is rarely technology. It’s capability.

High‑capability teams:

  • Adapt faster when things change

  • Get more value from fewer tools

  • Recover quicker when things go wrong

  • Make better decisions with incomplete information

Low‑capability teams:

  • Depend on vendors to think for them

  • Struggle when documentation is outdated

  • Freeze when incidents don’t follow the playbook

  • Keep buying “solutions” to fix people problems

Capability compounds over time. Tools depreciate. Skills appreciate.

Capability is built, not installed

This is the uncomfortable truth many leaders avoid.

You can’t deploy capability with a script, a purchase order or a project plan.

Capability is built through:

  • Repetition

  • Context

  • Practice

  • Feedback

  • Failure (and learning from it)

That’s why checklists alone don’t work.
That’s why “we sent them on a course” doesn’t stick.
That’s why shelfware exists.

People become capable when they use resources to solve real problems, not when they memorise features.

MSPs: this is your real value

For MSPs, this is where the opportunity — and responsibility — lies.

Clients don’t need more tools. They need better outcomes.

Your value isn’t:

  • Installing another product

  • Enabling another feature

  • Sending another report nobody reads

Your value is helping clients build the capability to use what they already have to:

  • Reduce risk

  • Improve productivity

  • Make better decisions

  • Sleep better at night

That means shifting conversations away from tools and towards outcomes, behaviour and repeatable execution.

Ask better questions

If you want better outcomes, start asking better questions:

  • What are we actually trying to improve?

  • What decisions should this capability enable?

  • Who needs to act differently as a result?

  • What happens if this fails at 2am on a Sunday?

  • Can this be repeated, not just demonstrated once?

These questions expose gaps in capability far faster than another product demo ever will.

The bottom line

Resources are everywhere. Capability is rare.

The organisations that win aren’t the ones with the biggest stacks — they’re the ones that can use what they have well, consistently, and under pressure.

If you care about outcomes, stop asking what else you need to buy.

Start asking whether you’re capable of using what you already have.

Because capability — not access — is what produces good outcomes.

Teams vs Email: Which to Use When

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Still emailing files back and forth? There’s a better way.

Email has been around forever, which is both its strength and its biggest problem. It’s familiar, universal, and dangerously easy to misuse. Most workplaces aren’t struggling because they lack tools — they’re struggling because they’re using the wrong tool for the job.

The real productivity gain doesn’t come from “moving everything to Teams”. It comes from knowing when to use Outlook, when to use Teams chat, and when a Teams channel is the right answer.

Let’s make that decision easier.


The core problem isn’t email — it’s overload

Email works brilliantly for external communication, formal messages, and one‑to‑one correspondence. Where it falls apart is collaboration.

Long reply‑all threads. Multiple versions of the same attachment. “See my comments in the attached doc v7 FINAL‑FINAL.docx”. Sound familiar?

Every time a conversation becomes ongoing, shared, or file‑centric, email starts to create friction. Teams exists to remove that friction — but only if it’s used properly.


A simple decision framework

Before you send that next message, ask one question:

Is this a conversation, a collaboration, or a communication?

Your answer determines the tool.


Use Outlook email when…

Email is still the right choice when:

  • You’re communicating externally (customers, suppliers, partners)

  • The message is formal, contractual, or needs an audit trail

  • It’s a one‑to‑one message with no expectation of ongoing discussion

  • You’re sending a summary or decision, not working something out

Email is a delivery mechanism, not a workspace. Treat it like the envelope, not the filing cabinet.


Use Teams chat when…

Teams chat is ideal for quick, informal, time‑sensitive conversations:

  • Clarifying a question

  • Getting a fast answer

  • Coordinating in the moment (“Are you free now?”)

  • Lightweight internal discussions that don’t need long‑term visibility

Chat is fast — and that’s both good and bad.

The mistake people make is using chat for work that actually matters later. Chats are hard to search, easy to lose, and tied to individuals rather than outcomes. If the conversation needs to live beyond today, chat probably isn’t the right place.


Use Teams channels when…

This is where the real shift happens.

Teams channels are for shared work, ongoing conversations, and files that matter.

Use a channel when:

  • Multiple people need visibility

  • Files will be edited collaboratively

  • The conversation will continue over days or weeks

  • The context matters more than the individual participants

  • You want one source of truth, not ten inboxes

A Teams channel replaces the entire email thread — conversation, files, history, and decisions — in one place.

This is the part most organisations get wrong. They create Teams, but still default to email “because that’s what we’ve always done”. The result is duplication, confusion, and frustration.


The practical rule most teams need

Here’s the rule I give clients:

If you’re about to reply‑all for the third time, stop and move it to a Teams channel.

One long email thread replaced with one Teams conversation per week is enough to change how people work. You don’t need a big transformation program — just one deliberate habit change.

Post the update in the channel. Upload the file once. Tag the people who need to see it. Let the conversation sit next to the work.


This is about behaviour, not technology

Teams doesn’t magically fix collaboration. It exposes it.

If your team lacks clarity, ownership, or structure, Teams will surface that quickly. Used well, though, it reduces noise, improves visibility, and stops work disappearing into inboxes.

Email isn’t going away. Nor should it. But if your internal collaboration still lives there, you’re paying a productivity tax you don’t need to.

So this week, pick one email thread and replace it with a Teams conversation.

You’ll wonder why you didn’t do it sooner.

LLMs Are Grown, Not Coded – And That Changes Everything

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One of the biggest misunderstandings I still see in the market is the idea that large language models are “just software”. That they’re something you build, configure, and control in the same way you do an application, a script, or even a PowerShell module.

They’re not.

LLMs are not coded in the traditional sense. They are grown.

And once you understand that distinction, a lot of confusion around AI, risk, accuracy, and expectations suddenly makes sense.

Code Is Deterministic. LLMs Are Probabilistic.

Traditional software works because we tell it exactly what to do.

If this happens, do that.
If the value equals X, return Y.
If the script runs twice with the same inputs, you expect the same outputs.

LLMs don’t work like that.

They are trained on vast amounts of data and learn patterns, relationships, and probabilities. When you prompt an LLM, it isn’t “executing logic”. It is calculating the most likely next token based on everything it has seen before.

That’s not coding.
That’s cultivation.

Think of an LLM less like a calculator and more like a very well‑read human who answers based on experience, context, and probability. Sometimes they’re brilliant. Sometimes they’re confidently wrong. And sometimes they surprise you with insights you didn’t expect.

You Don’t Compile an LLM – You Train It

When we write code, we compile it. When there’s a bug, we fix the line of code and re‑run it.

With LLMs, you don’t fix bugs in the same way.

You:

  • Change the training data

  • Adjust the fine‑tuning

  • Improve the prompt context

  • Add guardrails

  • Supplement with retrieval (RAG)

  • Wrap it in agents, workflows, and policy

That’s why LLMs improve over time in jumps, not increments. A new model release isn’t a patch Tuesday update – it’s a new organism that has grown up on a bigger, cleaner, more structured diet.

This is also why the same prompt can give you slightly different answers on different days or across different models. You’re not calling a function. You’re having a conversation with a statistical engine.

Why This Matters for Business (and MSPs)

If you think LLMs are coded, you’ll expect certainty.

If you understand they’re grown, you’ll design for outcomes instead.

That means:

  • You validate outputs instead of blindly trusting them

  • You treat AI as an assistant, not an authority

  • You design processes that assume probabilistic answers

  • You put humans in the loop where it matters

  • You focus on reducing risk, not eliminating it (because you can’t)

This is exactly why raw “public AI” is dangerous in business contexts, and why platforms like Microsoft 365 Copilot matter. Copilot doesn’t magically make the LLM smarter – it feeds it better data, constrains its environment, applies identity, compliance, and security, and grounds responses in your organisation’s reality.

The model hasn’t changed. The nutrition has.

Prompts Are Fertiliser, Not Commands

Another symptom of the “coded mindset” is prompt obsession.

People ask for the perfect prompt as if it’s a magic incantation.

Prompts don’t control LLMs.
They nudge them.

A good prompt gives context, tone, constraints, and examples. A bad prompt starves the model and then complains about the output.

Again, this makes sense if you think in biological terms. You don’t shout instructions at a plant and expect it to grow differently overnight. You change the environment, the inputs, and the expectations.

Why AI Feels Uncomfortable to Traditional IT People

For those of us who grew up with servers, scripts, and systems that either worked or didn’t, LLMs are uncomfortable.

They live in the grey.

They’re not always right.
They’re not always wrong.
They’re useful far more often than they’re perfect.

And that’s the mental shift required.

The organisations that win with AI won’t be the ones who treat it like another application to deploy. They’ll be the ones who treat it like a junior staff member that:

  • Needs good information

  • Needs supervision

  • Improves with feedback

  • Gets more useful the more you work with it
The Bottom Line

LLMs aren’t coded.
They’re grown.

If you try to manage them like software, you’ll be frustrated. If you treat them like a system that learns, adapts, and responds to its environment, you’ll unlock real value.

This is why AI strategy isn’t about models. It’s about data, context, governance, and outcomes.

And it’s why the real competitive advantage won’t come from “which AI you use”, but from how well you grow it inside your business.

If you’re still treating AI like a tool, you’re already behind.

If you’re treating it like a capability, you’re finally asking the right questions.

CIA Brief 20260411

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Anthropic’s powerful new AI model raises concerns about high-tech risks –

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lMaCfQMlXY0

Defender XDR – Monthly news – April 2026 –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoftthreatprotectionblog/monthly-news—april-2026/45…

Investigating Storm-2755: “Payroll pirate” attacks targeting Canadian employees –

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/blog/2026/04/09/investigating-storm-2755-payroll-pirate-at…

SOHO router compromise leads to DNS hijacking and adversary-in-the-middle attacks –

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/blog/2026/04/07/soho-router-compromise-leads-to-dns-hijack…

Inside an AI‑enabled device code phishing campaign –

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/blog/2026/04/06/ai-enabled-device-code-phishing-campaign-a…

Security Copilot Skilling Series –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoft-security-blog/security-copilot-skilling-series/4…

A modernized comments experience for Word, Excel, and PowerPoint on iPhone –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoft365insiderblog/a-modernized-comments-experience-f…

Microsoft Defender for Cloud Customer Newsletter –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoftdefendercloudblog/microsoft-defender-for-cloud-cu…

A third-party connector integrating Claude with Microsoft Sentinel is now available –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoftsentinelblog/a-third-party-connector-integrating-…

Threat actor abuse of AI accelerates from tool to cyberattack surface –

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/blog/2026/04/02/threat-actor-abuse-of-ai-accelerates-from-…

The best backup is the one you never think about –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoft365insiderblog/the-best-backup-is-the-one-you-nev…

What’s new in Microsoft Intune – March –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoftintuneblog/what%E2%80%99s-new-in-microsoft-intune…

What’s New in Microsoft 365 Copilot | March 2026 –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoft365copilotblog/what%E2%80%99s-new-in-microsoft-36…

What’s new in Power Platform: March 2026 feature update –

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/power-platform/blog/power-apps/whats-new-in-power-platform-march-20…

High Volume Email reaches General Availability in Exchange Online –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/exchange/high-volume-email-reaches-general-availability-in…

Microsoft 365 Copilot: Researcher with multi-model intelligence –

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4ZqK7_15uw

Copilot Cowork: Sales and Finance Workflows –

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h7nv7OCfsCY

File-level archiving comes to Microsoft 365 Archive (public preview) –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoft_365blog/file-level-archiving-comes-to-microsoft-…

Introducing multi-model intelligence in Researcher –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoft365copilotblog/introducing-multi-model-intelligen…

Copilot Cowork: Now available in Frontier –

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/blog/2026/03/30/copilot-cowork-now-available-in-front…

Microsoft SharePoint Turns 25! –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoft365insiderblog/microsoft-sharepoint-turns-25/4505…

Protect your enterprise from shadow AI and more: Announcements at RSAC 2026 –

https://blogs.windows.com/msedgedev/2026/03/23/protect-your-enterprise-from-shadow-ai-and-more-anno…

Guidance for detecting, investigating, and defending against the Trivy supply chain compromise –

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/blog/2026/03/24/detecting-investigating-defending-against-…

What’s new in SharePoint lists –

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HVrNK7MPzLk

Accessibility Assistant now flags inaccessible hyperlinks –

https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/blog/microsoft365insiderblog/accessibility-assistant-now-flags-…

After hours

Bessent summoned Wall Street leader to discuss Anthropic’s new AI  – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kl9LKFMj3Eg

Editorial

If you found this valuable, the I’d appreciate a ‘like’ or perhaps a donation at https://ko-fi.com/ciaops. This helps me know that people enjoy what I have created and provides resources to allow me to create more content. If you have any feedback or suggestions around this, I’m all ears. You can also find me via email director@ciaops.com and on X (Twitter) at https://www.twitter.com/directorcia.

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Watch out for the next CIA Brief next week