Use Microsoft Copilot in Teams to Turn Meetings into Communications
For Corporate Communications Specialists ·
What This Does
Copilot in Teams automatically summarizes meetings, extracts action items, and answers questions about what was discussed. You can turn a leadership meeting into a follow-up communication in minutes instead of reviewing a 90-minute recording.
Before You Start
- Your organization uses Microsoft Teams with Copilot enabled (Microsoft 365 Copilot license required)
- The meeting must be recorded or transcribed (Copilot works from the transcript)
- Meeting transcription must be turned on in Teams settings
- Time needed: 5-10 minutes after a meeting
- Cost: Included in Microsoft 365 Copilot ($30/user/mo)
Steps
1. Enable Meeting Transcription
Before your next meeting, ensure transcription is on. During a Teams meeting, click the three-dot menu (...) at the top of the meeting controls, then select Start transcription. You can also set this to start automatically in your Teams settings under Settings → Meetings → Transcription.
What you should see: A small "Transcription" indicator appears in the meeting window, and participants see a notification that transcription is active.
Troubleshooting: If "Start transcription" is grayed out, your IT admin hasn't enabled it for your organization. Contact your Teams administrator.
2. Access Copilot After the Meeting
After a meeting ends, open the meeting in Teams (find it in Chat → the meeting thread). Look for the Copilot tab at the top of the meeting chat, alongside Transcript and Recording tabs.
What you should see: A Copilot chat interface showing the meeting details with a text box to ask questions.
3. Ask Copilot to Summarize for Communications
Type requests in the Copilot chat to get exactly what you need:
"Summarize the key decisions made in this meeting""List all action items and who owns each one""What were the 5 most important topics discussed?""Draft a 150-word follow-up email summarizing what was decided"
What you should see: Copilot responds with structured summaries, decision lists, and action items pulled directly from the transcript.
4. Draft Your Follow-Up Communication
Once you have the summary, ask Copilot to format it for your specific communication need:
"Draft a post-meeting email to all leadership attendees confirming the 3 key decisions and 8 action items from this meeting. Tone: clear and direct."
Copy the output into Outlook, edit as needed, and send.
Real Example
Scenario: You attended a 90-minute leadership planning session to prep for the Q4 all-hands. The SVP discussed 12 different topics and 15 action items were mentioned. You need to send a meeting summary to the 8 attendees and draft the key messages for the all-hands agenda.
What you type in Copilot:
"What are all the action items from this meeting, grouped by owner?""What 5 topics received the most discussion time?""Draft a post-meeting summary email with decisions and action items for distribution to attendees""Based on this meeting, what should be the 4 key messages for our Q4 all-hands?"
What you get: Four distinct outputs in 5 minutes that would have taken 45–60 minutes of note review and drafting to produce manually.
Tips
- Always start transcription at the beginning of important meetings. Copilot only works with what's in the transcript.
- Ask for "decision log" summaries specifically when your organization needs traceable meeting records for compliance.
- Use Copilot to generate draft summaries, then review and edit. It occasionally misidentifies action item owners or conflates similar discussion points.
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