97% of Accenture employees report Copilot helped complete routine tasks up to 15 times faster. 89% monthly active usage among the 200,000-person cohort tested. Microsoft has over 450 million M365 enterprise users; only ~3% currently pay $30/month for Copilot. Its shares are down 12% this year.
Microsoft is rolling out its Microsoft 365 Copilot AI assistant to all of Accenture's approximately 743,000 employees in what Microsoft has described as the largest enterprise Copilot deployment to date. The deal, expands a prior commitment by Accenture to deploy Copilot to 300,000 employees and extends it to the company's full global workforce across more than 120 countries.
The timing is commercially significant for Microsoft: Copilot is the company's highest-profile enterprise AI product, but only around 3% of its 450 million-plus Microsoft 365 enterprise users currently pay the $30 per month Copilot premium. Microsoft shares are down approximately 12% this year as investors question whether the AI investment cycle will produce revenue growth at the expected pace.
Accenture's internal usage data, shared via Microsoft's Newsroom, provides the most detailed real-world Copilot performance figures published by any enterprise at scale. Among a 200,000-employee cohort that has been using Copilot for an extended period, monthly active usage reached 89%, an adoption rate that would be considered extremely high for any enterprise software, let alone a premium AI add-on.
97% of employees said Copilot helped them complete routine tasks up to 15 times faster. 53% reported significant productivity gains. And 84% said they would miss the tool if it were removed, a metric that reflects habit formation rather than novelty.
Tony Leraris, Accenture's CIO, said: “If Microsoft 365 Copilot weren't delivering real value, our people simply wouldn't be using it, our high adoption rate is what shows us that there is value.”
The rollout methodology is as notable as the scale. Accenture did not simply turn Copilot on for 743,000 people simultaneously. It started with a pilot of a few hundred senior leaders, scaled to 20,000 users, ran that cohort while refining data governance and access controls, then expanded in phases with a highly tailored change management programme that included one-on-one training for leaders, group sessions, and a structured internal community on Viva Engage where employees shared use cases.
Leraris' framing captures the lesson: “Real value from AI investments like Copilot doesn't come from simply turning it on. It comes from investing in your people, helping them understand how to use it, how to trust it and how it fits into the way they work.”
That is a direct rebuke of the deployment model in which enterprises purchase AI licences and expect adoption to follow automatically. The commercial by-product of the rollout is Avanade's D3 platform, a sales intelligence tool built by the joint venture between Accenture and Microsoft, which uses Copilot to aggregate proprietary internal data, industry context, and external sources into a real-time briefing for sales representatives.
The research that once took days or weeks can now be produced in seconds. Avanade has rolled out D3 to 25% of its sellers; active users are generating 43% more sales opportunities than colleagues not using the tool. That figure, if it holds at scale, makes D3 one of the most commercially compelling enterprise AI use-case demonstrations published in 2026.
For Microsoft, the Accenture deal addresses a specific and well-documented problem. The company has over 450 million Microsoft 365 enterprise users, by far the largest installed base of any enterprise productivity suite. Converting even a fraction of those users to the $30 per month Copilot premium would represent significant incremental revenue at near-zero marginal cost.
But enterprise AI adoption has proven slower than Microsoft's initial projections: early Copilot deployments were characterised by high purchase rates but low actual usage, as employees struggled to understand where the tool added value and change management was inadequate.
The Accenture rollout provides Microsoft with three commercially useful assets: a proof point for enterprise-scale adoption, a methodology blueprint for other large customers considering similar deployments, and a named reference that will be cited in every enterprise Copilot sales conversation for the next 18 months.
The broader context is the revised Microsoft-OpenAI partnership, which gives Microsoft the flexibility to integrate multiple AI models into Copilot, including Anthropic's Claude, rather than being exclusively dependent on OpenAI's GPT family.
Microsoft has introduced a “Critique” feature that cross-checks outputs between models to improve accuracy. That multi-model strategy both reduces dependency on any single AI provider and allows Microsoft to route different tasks to the best available model, a capability that will become increasingly important as enterprise customers ask for more granular control over which AI systems handle sensitive workloads.