
You glance at your inbox and see an email you didn’t send. Technically I sent it. It reads: “Accepted by Copilot on behalf of Petersen, Pat.” A meeting invite on my calendar from a colleague came in while you were heads-down on something else, your calendar was open, and Copilot handled it. Accepted, responded, done.

No prompt. No confirmation pop-up. Just action.
Microsoft quietly rolled out Calendar Instructions in Outlook as part of the Microsoft 365 Copilot experience, and it’s one of those features that looks minor on the surface but points to something much larger happening beneath it.
In Outlook, you navigate to Copilot settings and find Calendar Instructions.
From there, you write rules and Copilot follows them autonomously.

That’s it. No workflow automation, Power Automate flow, or IT ticket. You write an instruction the way you’d tell an assistant what to do, and it goes to work.
The feature lives under a broader vision Microsoft has been building toward (see Copilot Cowork: Microsoft’s Bold Leap from AI Assistant to AI Executor – Pat Petersen). Copilot as a persistent, always-on layer that understands you.
For the past two-plus years, the conversation around AI productivity has centered on prompting. How do you ask better questions? How do you get better outputs? The paradigm has been around your prompt.
This isn’t a prompt. It’s directions in natural language. That’s the agentic shift everyone in the Microsoft space has been talking about, and Calendar Instructions may be the first place everyday Microsoft 365 users encounter it in a genuinely useful, low-stakes way.
Think about what that means for how knowledge workers operate. We spend enormous cognitive energy on calendar juggling (accepting, declining, rescheduling, forwarding). It’s necessary but low-value work. Offloading that to a rule-based agent frees up attention for work that actually requires it.
AI isn’t just accelerating how we work. It’s beginning to take over the administrative layer of work entirely.
Getting started with Calendar Instructions takes about two minutes:
You can create multiple instructions for different people or scenarios. Some ideas to get started:
The natural language interface means you don’t need to be technical to use this effectively. If you can write it clearly, Copilot can follow it.

The post Your Calendar Just Got a Brain appeared first on Pat Petersen.
Original Post https://patpetersen.com/2026/04/19/calendar/