Lesson 04.3: How to Ask Copilot Chat for Useful Answers

Module 04: Microsoft 365 Copilot Chat

Lesson 04.3: How to Ask Copilot Chat for Useful Answers

Beginner Last verified: 2026-06-02
Availability note: Copilot features can vary by account, Microsoft 365 subscription, Microsoft 365 Copilot add-on license, organization settings, region, app version, admin controls, and rollout status.

Lesson Promise

Turn vague prompts into reliable work instructions using role, task, context, format, constraints, and verification.

Real-World Scenario

A consultant keeps getting generic answers. They need Copilot to produce client-ready work that matches a specific audience, tone, format, and evidence standard.

Core Concept

Good Copilot prompts are small work briefs. They explain the job, the audience, the source material, the expected format, and the standard for a good answer.

The best prompt is rarely the first prompt. You get better results by asking Copilot to clarify, draft, critique, revise, and verify.

A useful answer should be easy to inspect. Ask for headings, tables, assumptions, confidence notes, options, or next actions instead of a wall of text.

Step-By-Step Workflow

  1. Start with the outcome: what decision, draft, plan, or artifact do you need?
  2. Add audience and situation: who will read this and why?
  3. Name the source boundary: web, pasted notes, uploaded file, open app content, or approved work data.
  4. Specify the format: table, memo, email, agenda, plan, SOP, checklist, or slide outline.
  5. Set constraints: length, tone, reading level, exclusions, risks, or policy reminders.
  6. Ask Copilot to identify assumptions, missing information, and verification steps.

Prompt Lab

Bad Prompt

Make this better.

Better Prompt

Rewrite this update for an executive audience in 150 words. Keep the decision, risk, and next step clear.

Expert Prompt

Act as a senior business editor. Using only the pasted draft, rewrite it as a concise executive update with five sections: decision needed, background, options, recommendation, and risks. Keep it under 250 words, preserve all factual claims, flag anything unsupported, and list three questions I should answer before sending.

Hands-On Exercise

Choose one messy draft. Run a vague prompt, then run the expert version. Compare clarity, accuracy, and actionability.

Deliverable

A reusable prompt template with fields for role, outcome, source, audience, format, constraints, and verification.

Verification Checklist

Common Mistakes

  • Assuming Copilot can see a file, meeting, email, or chat when it cannot.
  • Mixing public web information with private work context without saying which source matters.
  • Treating a polished answer as a verified answer.
  • Asking for final copy before asking for an outline, critique, or verification pass.
  • Pasting sensitive information into a tool or tenant experience your organization has not approved.
Pro tip: Ask Copilot to include a short section called “What I used” and another called “What I could not verify.” This makes the answer easier to inspect.

Quiz / Checkpoint

What six ingredients make a Copilot Chat prompt more useful?

Role, task or outcome, context/source, audience, output format, constraints, and a verification request.

Official Sources To Verify

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