DigitalMe is a new tool that serves as a virtual proxy, a digital twin for our employees that delivers real-time, context-aware responses on their behalf.

Meet DigitalMe: Our AI digital twin that works on our behalf

Have you ever wanted a clone to help you keep up with your work?

In an always-on business environment, even routine collaboration can be overwhelming. But in an environment of Frontier Transformation, this challenge represents an opportunity for AI.

Our employees don’t need to handle all their work alone anymore, because agents can now extend their responsiveness and reach. Here in Microsoft Digital, the company’s IT organization, one of those AI agents is acting as a digital twin for just that purpose. It’s called DigitalMe, a personal virtual proxy designed to keep work moving when our employees are busy with other tasks.

Always-on knowledge without always-on employees

Large meetings generate a constant stream of questions, side conversations, and follow-up items. They’re often more than a single presenter or moderator can manage in real time. Important insights get buried in chat threads, queries go unanswered, and valuable momentum gets lost.

For our teams at Microsoft, this challenge became especially visible during large-scale readiness sessions, where subject matter experts found themselves inundated with requests for clarification and guidance.

A photo of Kerametlian.

“In order for our transformation into a Frontier Firm to be successful, we need to step back and ask what works well for employees, what doesn’t work well, and where agents can help.”

Stephan Kerametlian, senior director, Microsoft Digital

That’s not the only place where employees can use an extra hand. When people are out of the office, that doesn’t mean work stops. Their coworkers often need access to their colleagues’ knowledge to move mission-critical work forward, even when they’re not reachable.

“In order for our transformation into a Frontier Firm to be successful, we need to step back and ask what works well for employees, what doesn’t work well, and where agents can help,” says Stephan Kerametlian, a senior director in Microsoft Digital. “We’re crossing the horizon into human-led, agent-operated patterns of work.”

One team in Microsoft Digital created DigitalMe to explore what that future could look like in practice.

DigitalMe: A personal digital twin for Microsoft employees

For the members of our Employee Experience Success team responsible for adoption efforts around Microsoft 365 Copilot and Microsoft Copilot Studio in the Greater China Region, readiness meetings were becoming unwieldy because of attendee questions.

A photo of Bu.

“Our purpose was to use as little code and as much natural language as possible so people could modify their own personal DigitalMe easily. In Copilot Studio, you can manage agents as a solution. So users can just download and import a zip file, modify an agent like DigitalMe according to their business context and preferences, then use it.”

Ju Bu, business program manager, Microsoft Digital

The team wanted a way to focus on running the meeting while simultaneously providing their knowledge to participants. They decided to create an agent to help deal with the deluge of queries: DigitalMe.

At its core, DigitalMe is a personal, context-aware digital twin with versions that operate in both Microsoft Teams and Microsoft Outlook. It draws on the same knowledge bases and resources that its user can access, for example, SharePoint sites and Teams channels.

The team designed DigitalMe in Microsoft Copilot Studio and prioritized a low-code approach. At most, the creators used code to build 15–20% of the agent and accomplished the rest using natural language prompts.

“Our purpose was to use as little code and as much natural language as possible so people could modify their own personal DigitalMe easily,” says Ju Bu, a business program manager in Microsoft Digital. “In Copilot Studio, you can manage agents as a solution. So users can just download and import a zip file, modify an agent like DigitalMe according to their business context and preferences, then use it.”

Equipped with an employee’s full knowledge base, DigitalMe can respond in Outlook and Teams on its human counterpart’s behalf. To ensure transparency, a label appears at the beginning of each message indicating that it originates from the agent.

DigitalMe also reinforces context for the requester by including their original question in quotations. Finally, the agent @-mentions the recipient to notify them effectively.

The team identified two primary use cases for the agent:

  • Moderating live sessions. In large meetings, DigitalMe acts as an always-on co-moderator, answering questions in real time using scoped, preloaded knowledge. By speaking for them in the meeting chat, it helps presenters stay focused while ensuring attendees receive timely, accurate responses. Surfacing information instantly enhances both the efficiency and quality of the session. DigitalMe has the added advantage of being able to pull from resources the presenter might not recall in the moment. Over time, the agent captures and reuses questions and answers, turning live engagement into a growing knowledge base.
  • Extending employee availability. DigitalMe also provides a way for employees to remain responsive when they’re out of the office. It can monitor Teams chats or incoming emails, generate context-aware replies, and surface relevant knowledge for colleagues without human intervention. In practice, it’s proven especially valuable for teams distributed across widely different time zones and for handling project handoffs during onboarding or time-off scenarios.

A key advantage of DigitalMe is its ability to move beyond simple question-and-answer use cases. In some scenarios, it can also trigger workflows like creating tasks or capturing frequently asked questions.

A photo of Cheng.

“Our vision was that DigitalMe shouldn’t just be an assistant. It should function as our digital twin in the cyber world.”

Kai Cheng, program manager, Microsoft Digital

It was important to incorporate human-in-the-loop capabilities. When DigitalMe encounters gaps in its knowledge, it can flag those moments for follow-up, prompting users to refine and expand their knowledge sources. It represents another way that human-led, agent-operated processes continuously improve outcomes.

“Our vision was that DigitalMe shouldn’t just be an assistant,” says Kai Cheng, a program manager working in change management, digital transformation, and AI in Microsoft Digital. “It should function as our digital twin in the cyber world.”

In live sessions, DigitalMe has helped presenters stay focused while maintaining high levels of engagement, responsiveness, and support for participants. Employees are increasingly using it to bridge time zones, support knowledge transfer, and keep projects moving in their absence.

Key impacts of DigitalMe

Here are a few examples of results from our early experiments with DigitalMe:

  • Questions answered: 158 questions handled in one 60-minute session
  • Presenter time saved: Around 60–90 minutes of manual moderation effort
  • Audience engagement: More than 60 chat messages per session, with increased Q&A participation
  • Response accuracy: Around 90% of questions answered satisfactorily
  • Post-session value: 100% of questions and answers captured for reuse as FAQs
  • Adoption: Expanded use across teams, including learning and readiness programs

Extending the impact of DigitalMe

After seeing DigitalMe’s early success, our global readiness and adoption professionals identified the agent as an opportunity to turn individual innovation into a scalable capability. After templatizing the agent in collaboration with its original creators, we’ve now included it in our Agent Starter Kit. This resource makes it easy for employees to create their own personal versions of several useful agents.

A photo of Jones.

“Employees often think building an agent might be complex and time-consuming, and that limits their willingness to try and turn their ideas into working solutions. But tools like this show them how easy it can be.”

Alexandra Jones, director of business programs, Microsoft Digital

Our Agent Starter Kit walks employees through importing a ready-made agent, connecting it to their knowledge sources, and adapting it to their specific workflows. This approach has shifted DigitalMe from a single solution into a repeatable pattern, helping employees across the company move from curiosity to hands-on adoption. We’ve also incorporated the Agent Starter Kit into our Agent Launchpad skilling program to accelerate our employees’ agentic expertise as part of a Frontier firm

There’s an added benefit as well. By getting tools like DigitalMe into people’s hands through templatized versions they can modify and configure themselves, we’re highlighting how easy it can be for even nontechnical workers to build agents themselves.

“Employees often think building an agent might be complex and time-consuming, and that limits their willingness to try and turn their ideas into working solutions,” says Alexandra Jones, director of business programs in Microsoft Digital. “But tools like this show them how easy it can be.”

For organizations that want to replicate this kind of solution, the path is increasingly straightforward. By lowering the barrier to entry with templatized agents and no-code tools, our team in Microsoft Digital has demonstrated that any employee can build tailored, high-impact assistants without deep technical expertise.

How to get started creating agents like DigitalMe

  • Start with a real problem. Identify where employees feel overwhelmed and a need exists. That could be high-volume meetings, repetitive questions, or delayed responses.
  • Use a working template. Create prebuilt agents to accelerate development instead of starting from scratch.
  • Scope your knowledge sources. Ground your agent in trusted content like SharePoint, documentation, and FAQs to ensure accurate responses.
  • Design for specific triggers. Consider where and when the agent should act: Should it act on your behalf in in Teams, answer emails for you, or take other actions on your behalf.
  • Iterate with feedback. Track gaps in responses and expand your knowledge base over time to improve accuracy and usefulness.

By combining these practices and learning from our experience in Microsoft Digital, you can quickly move from experimentation to impact with agents. To get started at your company, sign up for a trial of Copilot Studio.

A photo of Wooldridge.

“The goal of Frontier Transformation is that AI is just there as you’re working, helping you practically do your job to enhance the experience and add value in real time.”

Kevin Wooldridge, senior director of digital transformation, Microsoft Digital

Looking ahead, we’re exploring ways to deepen these capabilities by adding memory and behavioral context so DigitalMe can better reflect individual working styles. The goal is to evolve it from a helpful assistant into a more complete digital representative.

Together, these advances point toward a future where employees routinely work alongside agents that grow, learn, and contribute more over time.

“DigitalMe is an example of the genuine, practical application of agentic use in the flow of work,” says Kevin Wooldridge, senior director of digital transformation in Microsoft Digital. “The goal of Frontier Transformation is that AI is just there as you’re working, helping you practically do your job to enhance the experience and add value in real time.”

Key takeaways

Follow these tips to start experimenting with agents like DigitalMe.

  • Ease and success bring adoption. Even fearful or resistant employees can become interested in participating when they have an easy onramp like templatized agents.
  • Be brave. Have a bias for building and trying agents. They’re rarely as difficult to build as some workers might imagine.
  • Start by setting your tech people free. They’re likely to demonstrate the art of the possible, become leaders in the space, and bring others along for the ride.
  • Encourage potential agent builders to take a step back and look at the basics. That reflection will help them learn to identify opportunities for agentic help in their roles.

Try it out

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