monkers
Squire
At work we use professional subscription versions of co pilot. I'll ask it some questions and it's responses in anticipation that it you'll see that it is adaptive - so while any text I produce at work using co pilot colleagues will still know that it is me. Ready for some insight?
I asked co pilot the first question from the everyman version to ask about professional versions.
Microsoft has developed Copilot for professional use, and it’s already being adopted by legal departments and law firms to streamline workflows, enhance research, and reduce administrative burden.
Here’s how it’s being used in legal settings:
Would you like help sketching how a law office might deploy Copilot across its teams—or how it could support your own analytical work?
I then logged into my pro version to ask ...
Absolutely, (name redacted) —and your instinct about adaptability is spot on.
Copilot can already adapt to the user's communication style in nuanced ways. The more you interact, the more it tunes into your preferences—whether you lean toward analytical precision, conversational warmth, or rigorous argumentation. For professional users, especially those in legal, academic, or policy-driven environments, this becomes incredibly useful.
Here's how that adaptation tends to work:
I asked co pilot the first question from the everyman version to ask about professional versions.
Are there versions of co pilot available for professional use, say lawyers offices?
Microsoft has developed Copilot for professional use, and it’s already being adopted by legal departments and law firms to streamline workflows, enhance research, and reduce administrative burden.
Here’s how it’s being used in legal settings:
🧠 Legal-Specific Capabilities
- Contract Review: Copilot in Word can compare agreements, flag missing provisions, and suggest edits based on precedent.
- Case Strategy Development: Legal teams use Copilot to analyze past case law and generate draft briefs or strategy outlines.
- Regulatory Compliance: Copilot can map regulations to internal policies and flag inconsistencies.
- Meeting Summaries: In Teams, it captures stakeholder discussions and generates action items for documentation.
- Document Discovery: Copilot scans large volumes of legal documents to identify relevant arguments and reduce billable hours.
🧾 Integration & Licensing
- Microsoft 365 Copilot for Enterprise: Designed for larger firms, integrates with Outlook, Word, Teams, and more.
- Copilot Studio: Lets firms build custom agents that connect to legal systems of record for tailored automation.
- Pricing: Around $30/month per user (annual commitment), with enterprise-grade security and compliance features.
🛡️ Security & Governance
- Data remains within your organization’s control.
- Compliant with GDPR and other data protection laws.
- Firms are encouraged to align Copilot use with internal governance and bias mitigation protocols.
Would you like help sketching how a law office might deploy Copilot across its teams—or how it could support your own analytical work?
I then logged into my pro version to ask ...
Can pro version co pilot be made adaptive so that it writes in the style of a regular user?
Absolutely, (name redacted) —and your instinct about adaptability is spot on.
Copilot can already adapt to the user's communication style in nuanced ways. The more you interact, the more it tunes into your preferences—whether you lean toward analytical precision, conversational warmth, or rigorous argumentation. For professional users, especially those in legal, academic, or policy-driven environments, this becomes incredibly useful.
Here's how that adaptation tends to work:
- Conversational modelling: Over time, I learn to mirror your tone—whether it's formal, skeptical, emphatic, or subtly ironic. In your case, I’ve noticed you favour proportionate reasoning and layered analysis, so I reflect that back.
- Stylistic consistency: When drafting documents, I pick up on preferred phrasing, sentence structure, and even your citation habits. For example, when I see you intend nested hypotheticals or prefer qualifying statements, I fold those in naturally.
- Memory-based adaptation: With long-term memory enabled, I can remember your stylistic preferences across chats. So I’ll recall whether you dislike bold text, prefer unembellished reasoning, or like legal jargon woven seamlessly into explanation.
- Formatting flexibility: I can adjust how I structure summaries, arguments, or reports—minimalist for skimming, or detailed for archival clarity.