Accenture Deploys Copilot to 743,000 Staff in Record AI Deal

Key Takeaways

- Microsoft deploys Copilot 365 to all 743,000 Accenture employees, its largest enterprise deal for the AI assistant
- 97% of surveyed Accenture staff said Copilot helped them complete routine tasks up to 15 times faster
- Only 3% of Microsoft 365's 450 million enterprise users currently pay for the $30/month Copilot add-on
Microsoft's Biggest Copilot Win Yet
Microsoft is rolling out its Copilot 365 AI assistant to all 743,000 Accenture employees. It's the largest enterprise deal for the chatbot to date. Neither company disclosed the financial terms in their joint statement on Monday.
The deal matters for Microsoft because Copilot adoption has been slow. Just over 3% of its 450 million Microsoft 365 enterprise users pay for the $30-a-month add-on. Sluggish uptake and uneven cloud growth have fueled investor concerns about Microsoft's massive AI spending. The company's shares are down 12% this year, following their biggest quarterly drop since the 2008 financial crisis in Q1.
Accenture's AI Bet Expands
This deployment builds on Accenture's 2024 plan to offer Copilot to 300,000 employees. The consulting giant has become one of the most aggressive corporate AI adopters. Media reports indicate the company has even tied senior promotions to AI usage.
“Our teams are already doing higher-value work because of it.”
— Julie Sweet, Accenture CEO
Accenture says its initial Copilot deployment delivered results. A company survey of 200,000 users found 97% said Copilot helped them complete routine tasks up to 15 times faster. About 53% reported major productivity gains.
Microsoft Diversifies Its AI Stack
Charles Lamanna, who leads Microsoft's M365 apps and Copilot platform, told Reuters that offering multiple AI models is boosting demand. Microsoft now includes Anthropic's Claude alongside OpenAI models. It also offers tools like "Critique," which uses one model to check another's output.
Microsoft has pushed Anthropic's technology to customers recently, aiming to reduce its OpenAI dependence. A reworked partnership announced Monday ends Microsoft's exclusive access to OpenAI's technology. OpenAI can now sell its products across rival cloud platforms.
Related coverage of OpenAI's enterprise strategy shift
The Productivity Question
Accenture's self-reported survey results contrast with broader industry data. A National Bureau of Economic Research study published in February surveyed nearly 6,000 senior executives at firms in the US, UK, Germany, and Australia. Nearly 90% said AI had no impact on employment or productivity over the past three years.
The gap between Accenture's internal findings and independent research raises questions. Self-reported surveys can reflect enthusiasm rather than measurable output changes. But they may also capture early adoption benefits that broader surveys miss.
Logicity's Take
Contrast: employee responses to enterprise AI deployments
What This Means for the Market
Microsoft's stock pressure reflects Wall Street's AI patience running thin. The company has spent billions on AI infrastructure. Investors want revenue, not just deployment announcements. This Accenture deal shows Microsoft can land flagship accounts, but the $30/month price point remains a barrier for most enterprises.
For Accenture, the full deployment signals commitment to practicing what it preaches. The firm sells AI transformation services to clients. Using Copilot company-wide lets consultants speak from experience.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many Accenture employees will get Microsoft Copilot?
All 743,000 Accenture employees will receive access to Microsoft Copilot 365, making it the largest enterprise deployment of the AI assistant.
How much does Microsoft Copilot 365 cost per user?
Microsoft Copilot 365 costs $30 per user per month as an add-on to existing Microsoft 365 enterprise subscriptions.
What productivity gains has Accenture reported from Copilot?
In a self-reported survey of 200,000 users, 97% said Copilot helped complete routine tasks up to 15 times faster, and 53% reported major productivity gains.
What percentage of Microsoft 365 users pay for Copilot?
Only about 3% of Microsoft 365's 450 million enterprise users currently pay for the Copilot add-on.
Does Microsoft Copilot only use OpenAI models?
No. Microsoft now offers multiple AI models in Copilot, including Anthropic's Claude, and tools like 'Critique' that use one model to verify another's output.
Need Help Implementing This?
Source: Tech-Economic Times / ET
Manaal Khan
Tech & Innovation Writer
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