
FROM SECRETARY TO MICROSOFT MVP
Carina’s path into technology did not begin in IT. It started as a secretary helping colleagues troubleshoot printers, Outlook issues, Excel formulas, and workplace applications. That early experience shaped her entire philosophy around adoption:
Technology only matters if it helps people do their jobs better. Over time, she transitioned into application management, workplace modernization, and eventually user adoption consulting after seeing firsthand how poorly organizations handled change management. Instead of focusing purely on technical implementation, she became obsessed with understanding:
That eventually led to the creation of Workspace Heroes, her company focused entirely on Microsoft 365 adoption strategy.
THE REAL PROBLEM WITH AI ADOPTION
According to Carina, most organizations make the same critical mistake: They buy AI before understanding workflows. During the conversation, she openly agrees that companies are purchasing AI solutions without first understanding how people actually operate inside the business. This creates a dangerous pattern:
Why? Because AI is not just another software rollout. Copilot changes behavior. And behavior takes time. Carina explains that successful Copilot adoption is not about teaching features. It is about helping users build repeatable daily habits around AI-assisted work.
WHAT IS A “HAPPY USER”?
One of the most powerful moments in the episode happens when Mirko asks a deceptively simple question: “What is a happy user?” Carina explains that most organizations never ask users this directly. Instead, companies measure:
But they rarely ask whether the technology actually improves the employee experience. Her definition of a happy user:
Someone who can use technology in the best possible way to perform their daily work while feeling more confident, capable, and mentally supported. This becomes the foundation of her adoption philosophy:
AI should not only increase output.
It should improve work itself.
THE NINETY-DAY AI ADOPTION MODEL
At Microsoft Ignite, Carina presented her ninety-day framework for scalable AI adoption. The framework is built around one core principle: Copilot adoption is behavior transformation. Not software enablement. Phase 1 — The First Fourteen Days: Build the Guardrails The first two weeks focus on preparing:
Carina argues that organizations spend far too much time overengineering preparation instead of starting small and learning quickly. Phase 2 — The Thirty-Day Habit Window This is where most AI projects either succeed or fail. Carina explains that users must repeatedly interact with Copilot during their normal workflow in order to build sustainable habits. Her recommended cadence:
This creates repetition. And repetition creates behavior change. Instead of overwhelming users with every feature at once, the goal is to help employees discover one task where AI genuinely improves their day. That single win becomes the anchor habit.
WHY MOST ROLLOUTS FAIL
Carina identifies several warning signs that indicate an AI rollout is already failing:
One of her strongest recommendations:
“Fake it till you make it.” In early adoption stages, project teams should actively model behavior, share prompts themselves, and demonstrate visible engagement until momentum becomes self-sustaining.
THE “MAKE IT SIMPLE” PHILOSOPHY
One of the strongest themes throughout the conversation is simplification. Carina argues that most Microsoft 365 environments overwhelm users because organizations enable everything immediately. Instead of helping employees master core workflows first, companies activate:
The result:
Cognitive overload. Her recommendation is radically simple:
Start with the basics.
Master them first.
Expand later. This philosophy applies directly to Copilot adoption as well. Do not teach every feature. Teach one useful habit.
WHY LEADERSHIP IS THE BIGGEST BOTTLENECK
One of the hottest takes in the episode is Carina’s direct agreement that leadership is often the biggest blocker to successful Copilot adoption. Executives approve AI initiatives quickly, but middle management is left carrying:
This creates a disconnect:
Leadership demands transformation while teams lack the bandwidth to absorb it. Carina argues that middle management must become a primary target audience for adoption programs because they are the bridge between strategy and behavior.
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