Module 09: Copilot in Outlook
Lesson 09.3: Drafting Better Emails Faster
Lesson Promise
Draft emails with Copilot that are clear, specific, audience-aware, and safe to review.
Real-World Scenario
A customer success lead needs to reply to a tense customer escalation without sounding defensive or making unsupported promises.
Core Concept
Draft with Copilot can create email text from instructions and can often adjust tone and length. In New Outlook and Outlook on the web, plain-text composition may not support Draft with Copilot.
The best email prompts include audience, relationship, goal, facts to include, boundaries, tone, and what not to promise.
Never let Copilot invent legal, pricing, roadmap, staffing, security, or customer commitments. Use placeholders where facts need approval.
Step-By-Step Workflow
- Define the email goal and recipient relationship.
- List facts to include and facts that still need verification.
- State the tone and length.
- Ask Copilot for a draft with placeholders for unapproved claims.
- Review for accuracy, tone, recipient fit, commitments, and confidentiality.
- Optionally ask for a shorter or warmer version before sending.
Prompt Lab
Bad Prompt
Reply to the customer.
Better Prompt
Draft a calm reply to this customer escalation. Acknowledge the issue, summarize our next step, and avoid promising a timeline we have not approved.
Expert Prompt
Draft a concise customer escalation reply. Audience: senior customer contact. Goal: acknowledge the issue, reduce tension, confirm what we know, state the next investigation step, and set a careful expectation. Do not admit fault, invent a root cause, promise a fix date, mention internal disagreement, or include confidential details. Use [VERIFY] for anything requiring approval.
Hands-On Exercise
Write one draft for a tense customer message, then ask Copilot for a shorter executive-safe version.
Deliverable
A reviewed email draft with verified facts, placeholders resolved, and tone notes.
Outlook Review Checklist
Common Mistakes
- Sending a Copilot draft without checking tone, accuracy, recipients, attachments, and confidentiality.
- Summarizing a thread and assuming every decision, risk, or nuance was captured.
- Using a polished executive tone to hide unclear ownership or missing facts.
- Bulk-triaging email without confirming the action and affected messages.
- Promising Outlook Copilot features without checking mailbox type, client, license, tenant settings, and rollout.
Quiz / Checkpoint
What belongs in an expert Outlook drafting prompt?
Audience, relationship, goal, facts, boundaries, tone, length, and explicit promises or claims to avoid.
Official Sources To Verify
- Summarize an email thread with Copilot in Outlook
- Draft an email message with Copilot in Outlook
- Get email coaching with Copilot in Outlook
- Frequently asked questions about Copilot in Outlook
- Triage Email with Microsoft 365 Copilot in Outlook
- Create a meeting agenda with Copilot in Outlook
- Schedule a meeting using Copilot
- How Copilot Chat works in Microsoft 365 apps
- What Copilot license do I have
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