Julie is a typical Microsoft employee, one who commutes to her office, parks in a garage, orders meals from the cafeteria, finds her way to and around different buildings, hosts visitors, and occasionally must deal with a facilities-related service request.
In the past, Julie might have interacted with different apps and websites to get help with each of those tasks. Today, thanks to the power of agentic AI and Microsoft Copilot Studio, Julie can turn to a single portal to handle all of it: the Employee Self-Service Agent.
This agentic tool, which will soon be released publicly as a free add-on for the Microsoft 365 Copilot license, has already made a big impact on the lives of our employees, saving them time, effort, and frustration. We call it the “one-stop shop” experience of employee self-service.
“Before we had the Employee Self-Service Agent, the employee-assistance experience was fragmented across mobile, websites, and physical kiosks,” says Becky West, a principal group product manager in Microsoft Digital, the company’s IT organization. “The new agent unifies all of these experiences and puts them in the same place.” Now our employees can ask questions in natural language, and it guides them through whatever campus experience they need to do—invite a guest, find dining options, create a help ticket, etc.

“Our employees rely on AI tools like Copilot to help get their work done. And the same is now true for resolving an issue related to facilities.”
Becky West, principal group product manager, Microsoft Digital
Of course, employees like Julie also need assistance with other common job-related tasks, like getting their human resources (HR) questions answered or fixing a technical issue with their device.
Those are also important categories included in the Employee Self-Service Agent, something the flexibility and extensibility of Copilot Studio makes possible.
“Our employees rely on AI tools like Copilot to help get their work done,” West says. “And the same is now true for resolving an issue related to facilities, HR, or IT support. We live in an AI-powered world, and this agent meets the moment for our people.”
In this story we share how we’re using the Employee Self-Service Agent in the real estate and facilities space, but it does much more than that. Our employees also use it to get help with IT problems and answers to their HR queries, and we expect to add other key areas soon, such as finance and legal. Available to all Microsoft employees worldwide, the full agent is already delivering a significant boost in productivity, cost savings, and user satisfaction across the company.
Everyday use cases for agentic assistance
Julie might not need IT support or help with an HR issue every day. But she’s always on the hunt for her favorite foods for lunch.
In our existing dining app, employees could look up that day’s menu for a specific building cafeteria, but they couldn’t just ask, “Hey, where can I get some good teriyaki on campus today?”
With the Employee Self-Service Agent, now they can.
“Searching on type of cuisine or dish is one of the top requests we were getting,” says Balaji Radhakrishnan, principal software engineering manager for the dining team. “It was an important feature missing from our existing apps, and we solved that with the employee-assistance agent.”
Employee Self-Service Agent screenshot

Not only can the agent help Julie locate the perfect lunch, it also connects her to the tool where she can order and pay for it. This streamlines the process for her—she doesn’t have to remember which website or app to call up to procure her teriyaki treat. (In the future, we plan to extend the functionality so the agent remembers your previous food choices, and you can order right from the agent.)
Dining is just one of the facilities-related experiences we targeted when developing the Employee Self-Service Agent. Other tasks include:
- Lobby and visitor services – registering a campus guest
- Parking – registering a car to park on campus
- Maps – navigating around a building or a campus
- Facilities tickets – getting help with office furniture, lighting, HVAC, or other building issue
- Transportation – calling a shuttle for a ride between buildings or finding commuting help
- Finding a space – locating a place to relax, work, or connect with colleagues
“We started out by looking at the services we already offered,” West says. “We thought about what tasks would be in highest demand, where that information or transaction lived now, and how best to surface it. The more we explored the power of the agent, the wider the variety of experiences we were able to incorporate.”
Saving time and reducing frustration
Resolving employee pain points and saving time are two of the key advantages inherent to this area of agentic employee assistance. Consider the common employee task of registering a business-related campus guest (such as an interview candidate or a prospective customer).

“If we can handle 50%—600,000—of these business-related visitor registrations through the Employee Self-Service Agent, that adds up to 50,000 hours of employee time each year.”
Bhavani Paruchuri, senior product manager, Microsoft Digital
According to Bhavani Paruchuri, a senior product manager in Microsoft Digital, in 2024 Microsoft saw more than 2 million registered visitors at our buildings worldwide. Roughly 1.2 million of these were business-related guests.
Previously, employees had to email or talk to lobby hosts (front-desk staff) when they wanted to register a guest; the host would then enter visitor details into the Guest Management System. Now, the Employee Self-Service Agent provides a simple form within the chat, asking for details like guest name, email, purpose, building number, and date. Once the form is submitted, the system confirms it and sends a QR code directly to the guest via email.
“We calculated that this new process could save at least five minutes for each guest registration,” Bhavani says. “If we can handle 50%—600,000—of these business-related visitor registrations through the Employee Self-Service Agent, that adds up to 50,000 hours of employee time each year. So, just in this one area alone, the agent can have a big impact on overall productivity.”
Those savings add up, and quickly.

“Once you start using the agent for dining, you use it daily. As we added in cuisine and price filtering and other functionality that wasn’t available before, you could see it was a big differentiator from what the previous tools could do.”
Erik Downing, principal product manager, Microsoft Digital
One of the reasons we decided to include facilities-related help early on in the development of the Employee Self-Service Agent is that these common tasks would help increase usage of the new portal—building a habit with our workers that would have long-term benefits.
We have already seen employees used to finding a meal with the agent also using it to solve other challenges, including in the HR and Support spaces.
“Once you start using the agent for dining, you use it daily,” says Erik Downing, a principal product manager with Microsoft Digital. “As we added in cuisine and price filtering and other functionality that wasn’t available before, you could see it was a big differentiator from what the previous tools could do.”
West explains how this can have an outsized effect on promoting product adoption.
“If people get in the daily habit of using the agent for these routine tasks, they’ll be more comfortable going to it for other things,” West says. “Then you can really start to scale the agent up and see the larger impact across more areas.”
Filing a service request with the help of AI
Julie gets to work one morning and is dismayed to discover that her adjustable desk will no longer rise to a standing position. She needs to open a facilities ticket for help.

“The AI automatically picks out the problem class and the problem type; presents a form with the details; asks for confirmation; then kicks off the ticket right from there. It’s all in one place, AI-driven, and truly agentic in terms of task completion—and it will only get better.”
Sonaly Choudary, senior product manager, Microsoft Digital
In the past, this would have required Julie to send Facilities an email with a description of the problem, or she would have had to track down the right app or web form for the same purpose.
Now, she can simply snap a photo of the broken desk and upload it to the Employee Self-Service Agent.
The agent will open a form and use information from the photo to create the help ticket right there. This image-based technology, like natural-language chat, is something that our previous apps couldn’t do, which reflects the power of AI.
“Whether you upload a photo or just describe your issue using natural language, we’ve really pushed this tool to be as agentic as possible,” says Sonaly Choudary, a senior product manager who works on facilities technology products for Microsoft Digital. “The AI automatically picks out the problem class and the problem type; presents a form with the details; asks for confirmation; then kicks off the ticket right from there. And then you can query the agent to get status updates on it. It’s all in one place, AI-driven, and truly agentic in terms of task completion—and it will only get better.”
How Customer Zero makes our products better
Because Microsoft employees are the first ones to use our newest products and features, we have the opportunity to roll them out gradually and test them under actual enterprise-work conditions, which enables us to gather valuable feedback and telemetry. This data is then fed back into the product development process to make key improvements. We call this our Customer Zero philosophy.

“We were pioneers as Customer Zero in showing the need for these services in an employee-assistance portal, and the product group saw that need.”
Michelle Schaefer, principal product manager in Microsoft Digital
In the case of the Employee Self-Service Agent, we began product development by tackling HR and IT support, which were key areas to capture cost savings.
But how could we get even wider usage of the product? We turned to our real estate and facilities functions.
“The facilities and real estate aspect of Microsoft Digital is unique, in that it focuses on the employee experience at the company, literally in the buildings,” says Michelle Schaefer, a principal product manager in Microsoft Digital. “All those tasks—getting lunch, parking, filing a facilities ticket, moving around the campus, inviting a guest—are universal for all our employees. We were pioneers as Customer Zero in showing the need for these services in an employee-assistance portal, and the product group saw that need. And we’re constantly gathering telemetry to learn how our workers can more easily discover the agent and have a better experience with it each time.”
Adding the facilities and real estate category to the Employee Self-Service Agent also helped our engineers learn more about building an agent that presents a “single pane of glass” to the user on the front end but incorporates so many different functions on the back end.

“Our strategy with this new natural-language agent is to augment our existing tools, which brings AI to the experience and gets the user to the right place.”
Thomas Po, senior product manager, Microsoft Digital
Each team has its own tools that compete for our employees’ attention.
“The challenge was to turn all those into a common experience for the user,” says Erik Orum Hansen, a principal engineering manager for Microsoft Digital. “That’s been a learning journey for us, as the organization pivoted to developing a single agent incorporating all these different functions.”
This single-portal approach makes it so much easier for users to explore their options and figure out the best way to accomplish the task, even as the underlying tools are still available.
We still have as many as 15 different tools that employees use today for campus related tasks, but we’re managing them more effectively—now our employees only need to use them when their use case is more challenging or detailed in nature.
“Our strategy with this new natural-language agent is to augment our existing tools, which brings AI to the experience and gets the user to the right place,” says Thomas Po, a senior product manager for Microsoft Digital. “The user may not have the specific facilities app they need on their phone, but everyone has Copilot, right? It’s about giving our employees access to information in more places and connecting them to the right tool or function.”
Employee Self-Service Agent screenshot

The Employee Self-Service Agent can also see when an employee took prior action, recognize that they might want to take the same action again, and suggest that action—for example, suggesting that they may want to reserve a shuttle ride to the same location they’ve visited previously.
“This allows users to have a more contextual, conversational experience,” says Ram Kuppaswamy, a principal software engineering manager in Microsoft Digital. “For example, for transportation needs they can just type, ‘Help me book a campus shuttle,’ and the agent can suggest options based on their previous ride history. Then it can call up a form to help complete the booking. Users really love it.”
Built on the power of Copilot Studio
We built the Employee Self-Service Agent with Microsoft Copilot Studio, a powerful platform that allows you to create and extend AI agents. The agent is designed so that our customers can customize it to fit their own business needs and integrate it with their existing technologies.

“We didn’t want a custom connector; we wanted to go with an out-of-the-box connector that worked with Dynamics,” he says. “There were some product iterations to deal with while we made sure it met Microsoft’s data-compliance standards, but ultimately it made it easier to show customers how simple it is to implement the agent—it’s a very low-code/no-code solution.”
Erik Orum Hansen, principal engineering manager, Microsoft Digital
When we built the part of the Employee Self-Service Agent that handled HR and IT Support needs, we were able to create connectors for major third-party service providers in those areas, such as Workday, SAP, and ServiceNow. (These connectors are now “out-of-the-box capabilities” that are included in the product.)
In the facilities and real estate space, we have numerous vendors that we work with to provide various campus services. Since we already used various existing internal applications to connect employee requests with these vendors, we were able to create connectors for the agent easily using Copilot Studio. More importantly, we were also able to use the out-of-the-box Dataverse connector that worked with our Dynamics 365 data, which cut down on development time.
“The agent functions as a single entry point, which then connects with the Microsoft Dynamics data,” Schaefer says. “We have numerous different facilities vendors in different parts of the world, but we didn’t have to build multiple connectors to those vendors because of the common Dynamics back end.”
Orum Hansen says this caused a small delay in the internal deployment of the product, but that it was worth it in the end.
“We didn’t want a custom connector; we wanted to go with an out-of-the-box connector that worked with Dynamics,” he says. “There were some product iterations to deal with while we made sure it met Microsoft’s data-compliance standards, but ultimately it made it easier to show customers how simple it is to implement the agent—it’s a very low-code/no-code solution.”

“We’re also previewing more multi-agent capabilities that are coming from Copilot Studio, which our customers will be able to incorporate into their own solutions. The product is just going to get richer and richer over time, as it extends into other lines of business.”
Kirk Gregersen, corporate vice president, Microsoft Viva and Microsoft 365 Copilot Experiences
The future of workplace AI
In many ways, we’re still in the early stages of the revolution that AI agents are going to bring to the workplace.
But the Employee Self-Service Agent is a significant early marker on that path.
“The first step is to develop this agent that’s optimized for the HR, IT, and facilities verticals,” says Kirk Gregersen, corporate vice president of product for Microsoft Viva and Microsoft 365 Copilot Experiences. “We’re also previewing more multi-agent capabilities that are coming from Copilot Studio, which our customers will be able to incorporate into their own solutions. The product is just going to get richer and richer over time as it extends into other lines of business.”
As employees like Julie are already finding out, this new era of agentic AI is going to be a major improvement over what came before.
“Most companies already have some kind of employee-assistance portal solution,” Orum Hansen says. “With this new agent, there’s an opportunity to really reimagine the entire experience—to shed some of the old baggage and figure out how to do things differently. It’s going to lead to a more efficient workplace, along with more satisfied employees.”

Key takeaways
Here are a few factors to remember when implementing an AI-powered employee-assistance solution at your company:
- Pick high-value targets. Consider employee needs and the most commonly used assistance functions (using data where available), then develop a solution that addresses those areas. This will drive adoption and daily use of the agent.
- Customize the solution. Take advantage of the extensibility of Copilot Studio to develop an agent that fits your organization’s specific needs.
- Augment existing tools. Your employee-assistance agent can be the front door through which users find the tool they need. Over time, you can retire legacy tools and portals as the agent is able to complete the same functions on its own.
- Go beyond information retrieval. Employees want to be able to carry out tasks right from the agent, so incorporate forms and other technologies that allow them to accomplish their goal as quickly and easily as possible.
- Think outside the box. The image-driven feature we developed for filing a facilities ticket is a great example of applying the revolutionary abilities of AI to solve problems in new and innovative ways.

Related links
- Read about the full scope of the impact the Employee Self-Service Agent is having on our organization.
- Learn about our strategic approach to agentic AI internally at Microsoft.
- Explore how the Employee Self-Service Agent is helping Puget Sound-based Microsoft employees with their transportation needs.
- Explore how Microsoft HR is using Viva and Copilot to empower our employees.

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