Word Copilot Draft from Prompt: Write Full Documents in Seconds
Published: June 17, 2026 | Category: Word | Topic: Copilot AI Drafting
Writing a report, proposal, or business memo from a blank page is one of the most time-consuming tasks in any office workflow. In 2026, Microsoft Word Copilot has made that blank-page problem largely obsolete. The Draft with Copilot feature lets you describe what you need in plain language and receive a fully structured, multi-paragraph document draft in seconds — ready for you to refine, expand, or publish.
This guide walks you through exactly how to use Word Copilot drafting, what kinds of prompts produce the best results, and how to iterate on drafts to get publication-ready content quickly.
What Is Draft with Copilot?
Draft with Copilot is a feature inside Microsoft Word (Microsoft 365) that generates a full document draft from a natural language prompt. Unlike simple autocomplete or sentence suggestions, it produces multiple paragraphs with proper structure — headings, body text, and logical flow — based on your description.
It can also reference files, emails, and meetings from across your Microsoft 365 environment, pulling in relevant context from SharePoint, OneDrive, Teams, and Outlook to make drafts more accurate and personalized.
How to Access Draft with Copilot in Word
Open Microsoft Word and create a new blank document.
Look for the Copilot icon in the document — it appears as a small sparkle icon in the left margin near the top of the page, or you can click the Copilot button in the Home ribbon.
Click the Copilot draft prompt box. It will say something like "Draft with Copilot" or "Describe what you'd like to write."
Type your prompt describing the document you want.
Press Generate. Copilot will produce a draft directly in the document, typically within 10 to 30 seconds.
Writing Effective Prompts
The quality of your draft depends almost entirely on the quality of your prompt. Copilot responds well to specific, structured descriptions. Here are the key ingredients of a strong prompt:
Document type: Tell Copilot what kind of document you need — a business proposal, executive summary, meeting agenda, project status report, or employee onboarding guide.
Audience: Specify who will read it — senior leadership, new hires, clients, or a technical team. Copilot will adjust the tone and vocabulary accordingly.
Key points: List the main topics or sections you want covered. The more specific you are, the more accurate the draft.
Tone and length: Ask for a formal or informal tone, and mention whether you want a one-page summary or a detailed five-section report.
Prompt Examples
Weak prompt: "Write a report about sales."
Strong prompt: "Draft a two-page quarterly sales performance report for our VP of Sales. Include sections on revenue vs. target, top-performing products, regional breakdown, and three recommendations for Q3. Use a professional, data-driven tone."
Weak prompt: "Write a proposal."
Strong prompt: "Create a business proposal for a client in the retail sector, pitching our inventory management software. Include an executive summary, problem statement, our solution overview, pricing tiers, and a call to action. Tone should be confident and client-focused."
Referencing Your Own Files and Data
One of the most powerful aspects of Word Copilot in 2026 is the ability to reference your existing Microsoft 365 content directly inside the prompt. You can type a forward slash (/) or use the file icon in the prompt box to attach:
SharePoint documents and pages
OneDrive files you have recently accessed
Teams meeting transcripts and recordings
Outlook emails and meeting notes
For example: "Draft a project status report based on [Teams meeting transcript from last Tuesday] and [Project_Plan_v3.xlsx]. Summarize progress, flag blockers, and list next steps." Copilot will read those files and use their content to populate the draft accurately.
Iterating on Your Draft
The draft Copilot generates is a starting point, not a finished product. After the initial generation, you have several options:
Keep it: Accept the draft and start editing manually.
Regenerate: Ask Copilot to try again with a different approach.
Refine: Select any section and ask Copilot to rewrite it — make it shorter, more formal, more persuasive, or add more detail.
Expand: Highlight a paragraph and ask Copilot to expand it with examples or additional context.
You can also use inline Copilot prompts anywhere in the document by pressing Alt+I (or clicking the Copilot icon in the margin) to insert new content, rewrite a selection, or ask questions about the document.
Use Cases That Save the Most Time
Meeting follow-up reports: Prompt Copilot with your Teams transcript to generate action items, decisions, and next steps automatically.
Client proposals: Reference your pricing spreadsheet and a notes file to get a first draft proposal ready in minutes.
Policy documents: Ask Copilot to draft an HR policy or IT procedure based on your company guidelines document.
Training materials: Generate onboarding guides, how-to documents, or FAQ pages from bullet-point notes.
Requirements
Draft with Copilot requires a Microsoft 365 Copilot license (separate from the standard Microsoft 365 subscription). It is available in Word for Windows, Word for Mac, and Word on the web. Your organization's IT administrator must enable Copilot features in the Microsoft 365 admin center.
Conclusion
Word Copilot drafting is not just a convenience — it genuinely changes the economics of document creation. Tasks that previously took an hour of focused writing can now produce a solid first draft in under a minute, leaving your time free for review, refinement, and judgment rather than blank-page staring.
The key is learning to write better prompts. Start with a simple prompt on your next document, see what Copilot produces, and then experiment with adding more context and structure. You will be surprised how quickly the quality climbs. Follow officelearner.net for more tips on getting the most from Copilot across every Microsoft 365 app.













