Outlook Copilot Meeting Prep in 2026: Auto-Generate Briefings Before Every Meeting
Published: May 30, 2026 | Category: Outlook / Microsoft Copilot | Reading Time: 7 min
Walking into a meeting unprepared is one of the most common — and most avoidable — productivity killers in the modern workplace. In 2026, Outlook Copilot's Meeting Prep feature changes this completely. With a single click, Copilot scans your email threads, shared documents, previous meeting notes, and calendar history related to an upcoming meeting, then delivers a concise briefing document so you can walk in fully informed. Here is everything you need to know about this game-changing capability.
What Is Outlook Copilot Meeting Prep?
Meeting Prep is a feature within Outlook Copilot that generates a pre-meeting briefing for any event on your calendar. It pulls together:
Recent email threads with the meeting participants
Shared documents and files referenced in those emails or in Teams chats
Notes and action items from previous meetings with the same attendees
Any open tasks in Microsoft Planner or To Do assigned to or from the participants
The meeting agenda if one is included in the invite
Copilot then synthesises all of this into a structured briefing you can read in two to three minutes, giving you context, recent developments, and suggested talking points.
How to Use Meeting Prep in Outlook
Meeting Prep is available in both the new Outlook for Windows and Outlook on the web. Here is how to access it:
From the Calendar View
Open Outlook and navigate to your Calendar.
Click on any upcoming meeting to open the event detail panel.
Look for the Copilot icon in the toolbar and click "Prepare for this meeting".
Copilot will take 15–30 seconds to generate your briefing and display it in a side panel.
You can expand any section of the briefing to see source references, or click a document link to open it directly.
From the Copilot Sidebar
You can also trigger Meeting Prep from the Copilot sidebar in Outlook. Simply open the sidebar, type "Prepare me for my meeting with [Name] tomorrow" or "What do I need to know for today's 2pm call?" and Copilot will identify the meeting and generate the briefing on demand.
What the Briefing Includes
A typical Meeting Prep briefing is structured in four sections:
1. Context Summary
A two to three sentence overview of what the meeting is about, who the participants are, and what the stated purpose or agenda is. If the meeting has no agenda, Copilot infers the purpose from recent email context.
2. Recent Developments
A bullet-point summary of key things that have happened since the last time you met with these people (or in the last 14 days if this is a first meeting). This includes decisions made in email, documents shared, deadlines that have passed or changed, and any open questions raised but not yet resolved.
3. Open Action Items
A list of tasks that were committed to in previous meetings or emails, showing who owns each item and whether it appears to be complete. This is pulled from Teams meeting transcripts, email conversations, and Planner tasks.
4. Suggested Talking Points
Based on the context, Copilot suggests three to five topics you might want to raise. These are not instructions — they are prompts based on gaps, unresolved issues, or upcoming deadlines detected in the source material. You can edit or dismiss any suggestion.
Privacy and Data Boundaries
A natural question is: what data does Copilot access when generating a briefing? The answer is limited to content you already have permission to see. Copilot respects all Microsoft 365 permissions boundaries, so it will only include documents you have access to, email threads you are part of, and meetings you attended or have notes from. It will not surface confidential information shared between other attendees that you were not included in.
Your organisation's IT administrator can configure additional policies to restrict which data sources Copilot can access for Meeting Prep, including options to exclude specific SharePoint sites or email folders.
Tips for Getting Better Briefings
Include an agenda in your invites: Copilot uses the agenda as a framework for the briefing. Even a brief bullet list of topics dramatically improves the relevance of the output.
Use descriptive meeting titles: A meeting called "Q2 Budget Review — Marketing Team" gives Copilot far more context than "Catch-up".
Enable Teams meeting transcription: If you transcribe your Teams meetings, Copilot can reference those transcripts when building the Recent Developments and Open Action Items sections for follow-up meetings.
Ask Copilot to go deeper: After the initial briefing, you can follow up with questions like "What was the decision about the project timeline in our last meeting?" and Copilot will drill down into the source material for a more detailed answer.
Save briefings to OneNote: Use the Save to OneNote button in the Meeting Prep panel to archive briefings alongside your meeting notes for future reference.
Who Benefits Most?
Meeting Prep is transformative for anyone who attends many meetings across multiple workstreams. In particular:
Executives and senior managers who switch between topics and stakeholders multiple times per day
Account managers and sales professionals who need a complete picture of the client relationship before every call
Project managers who need to track open action items across multiple stakeholder groups
Anyone returning from leave who needs to catch up quickly before re-entering active projects
Conclusion: Walk Into Every Meeting Ready
In 2026, being unprepared for a meeting is a choice — because Outlook Copilot's Meeting Prep feature means being fully briefed takes less than a minute. By automatically synthesising emails, documents, previous notes, and open tasks into a structured briefing, Copilot does the cognitive heavy lifting so you can focus on the conversation itself.
Open your Outlook calendar right now, click on your next meeting, and try the Prepare for this meeting button. The time you save will compound every single day.
For more Outlook and Microsoft 365 Copilot tips, visit officelearner.net












