{"type":"video","version":"1.0","html":"<iframe src=\"https://www.loom.com/embed/73d19ee6c79542c5afadd709731bc8d2\" frameborder=\"0\" width=\"1920\" height=\"1440\" webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen></iframe>","height":1440,"width":1920,"provider_name":"Loom","provider_url":"https://www.loom.com","thumbnail_height":1440,"thumbnail_width":1920,"thumbnail_url":"https://cdn.loom.com/sessions/thumbnails/73d19ee6c79542c5afadd709731bc8d2-cd00d74c67b2d55d.gif","duration":417.066667,"title":"Use Copilot as a Context Orchestrator","description":"This Loom explains how to use Microsoft Copilot as a context-aware orchestration layer inside Microsoft 365 rather than a generic chatbot. It emphasizes prompting Copilot where the “truth” lives in each app, such as Outlook for email, Teams for meetings, Word for documents, Excel for data, and PowerPoint for narratives, and using specific outcomes, source facts, and constraints. It compares Copilot to ChatGPT, noting Copilot automatically grounds answers in secure workplace data while ChatGPT requires manual context packing. It also covers safe and secure use, stating Copilot respects company permissions and that Microsoft does not use prompts or company data to train public foundation models."}