Module 11: OneNote, Loop, and Copilot Notebooks
Lesson 11.3: Getting Started with Copilot Notebooks
Lesson Promise
Create a Copilot Notebook as a focused workspace for a project, client, research effort, or operating system.
Real-World Scenario
A founder wants one place where Copilot can reason over a launch plan, brand brief, pricing notes, customer research, and meeting notes.
Core Concept
Microsoft describes Copilot Notebooks as scoped workspaces where Copilot uses the references you add, not your entire OneDrive, email, Teams chats, or the public web.
Notebooks can include references such as Word documents, PowerPoint decks, Excel sheets, Copilot Pages, and other supported content. Microsoft notes limited file grounding and gradual rollout for some features.
A strong notebook has a purpose, reference rules, update cadence, source hygiene, and a decision log. Without those, it becomes another messy folder.
Step-By-Step Workflow
- Choose one notebook purpose and audience.
- Name the questions the notebook should answer.
- Add only approved references that support those questions.
- Ask Copilot for a source map and missing-reference list.
- Create custom instructions or a weekly prompt set where available.
- Review and refresh references on a schedule.
Prompt Lab
Bad Prompt
Create a project brain.
Better Prompt
Create a Copilot Notebook for this product launch. It should answer questions about goals, audience, offer, pricing, launch tasks, risks, and decisions.
Expert Prompt
Design a Copilot Notebook for a product launch. Include notebook purpose, audience, reference categories, files to add, files to exclude, weekly prompts, decision log, stale-source review, sharing rules, and questions the notebook should not answer without verification.
Hands-On Exercise
Plan a notebook for a safe project before adding references. Define the exact questions it should support.
Deliverable
A Copilot Notebook blueprint with purpose, references, prompts, review cadence, and sharing rules.
Knowledge Workspace Review Checklist
Common Mistakes
- Treating a notebook as if it can see every file, email, chat, or web page automatically.
- Adding too many weak references instead of curating the few sources that actually matter.
- Letting stale notes, old plans, or unverified links drive current project answers.
- Sharing notebooks without checking linked-file permissions and sensitive content.
- Confusing OneNote notes, Loop pages, Copilot Pages, and Copilot Notebooks as the same experience.
Quiz / Checkpoint
What makes Copilot Notebooks different from broad work grounding?
A notebook is scoped to the references you add and have permission to access, rather than automatically using every work source.
Official Sources To Verify
- How Microsoft 365 Copilot Notebooks works
- Get started with Microsoft 365 Copilot Notebooks
- Add references to your Microsoft 365 Copilot Notebook
- Refer to specific files and more in Microsoft 365 Copilot
- Welcome to Copilot in OneNote
- Summarize your OneNote notes with Microsoft 365 Copilot
- Copilot tutorial: Summarize and identify to-do items with Copilot in OneNote
- Loop access via Microsoft 365 subscriptions
- Copilot Chat in Microsoft 365 apps
- What Copilot license do I have
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