Let AI find ways to work smarter
There’s a particular kind of work that’s too small to fix and too frequent to ignore. Reformatting the same export. Re-typing the same reply. Clicking the same five steps to pull the same numbers. Each instance costs a couple of minutes, which is why you never stop to automate it — but multiplied across a month, it’s days.
The Copilot watches how work actually flows and catches these patterns. When it sees you doing the same thing the same way for the third or fourth time, it speaks up: “You do this every week — want me to turn it into a skill?” Say yes, and it builds the thing, in your workspace, no code required.
From noticing to building
It spots the pattern
Because the Copilot rides alongside your work and grounds itself in your business context, it recognizes repetition for what it is — the same report, the same question, the same path through two tools — rather than treating each instance as new.
It proposes the fix
It comes to you with a specific suggestion, not a vague “you could automate things.” It names the exact task, sketches what the skill would do, and waits for your call. You decide whether it’s worth building.
It builds it into your workspace
Approve it and the Copilot creates a reusable skill or automation — wired into the tools and agents you already use. Next time the task comes up, it’s handled, and you can put it on a schedule so it runs without being asked.
When you already know where the friction is, you can just point it out:
You authorize what it builds
Proactive doesn’t mean unilateral. The Copilot suggests; you approve. Nothing becomes an automation, and nothing runs on its own, until you’ve said yes — and you can edit or retire any skill it builds. The result is a workspace that gets a little sharper every week, because the friction you’d have lived with forever keeps getting designed out. Illustratively, teams find a handful of these small automations add up to hours back each week — not from one big change, but from many small ones the Copilot noticed first.
Frequently asked questions
It watches how work actually flows — the tasks you repeat, the steps you redo — grounded in your business context. When it sees the same work done the same way repeatedly, it flags that as a candidate for a skill or automation.
No. The Copilot proposes; you authorize. It names the specific task and what the fix would do, and nothing is built or runs until you approve it. You can edit or remove any skill it creates.
Reusable skills and automations wired into the tools and agents already in your workspace — things like assembling a recurring report, drafting a repeat reply from your docs, or gathering numbers on a schedule. No code; you confirm in plain language.
It runs beside your main chat rather than barging into it, and it surfaces a suggestion when it spots real, repeated friction — not for one-offs. You stay in your flow and decide which proposals are worth it.