Monetising Copilot

Monetising Copilot

Monetising Copilot is far more than reselling licences; MSPs can turn Copilot into a high‑margin, recurring service by owning readiness, deployment, security, training, and the ongoing agent lifecycle.

Why monetising Copilot is a major MSP opportunity

  • Microsoft is pushing Copilot as the new productivity layer, but most customers lack data readiness, governance, and adoption plans, creating a natural advisory gap for MSPs to fill.​
  • Microsoft’s own guidance shows that value comes from aligning Copilot to business processes and data, not just switching licences on, which is exactly where MSP services can be monetised.​
  • As organisations move from a single Copilot experience to rich agent ecosystems, service demand compounds, turning monetising Copilot into an ongoing programme, not a one‑off project.​

Building a monetising Copilot offer

  • Package Copilot into a clear offer that tracks the customer journey: AI readiness, licence selection, secure deployment, adoption, and continuous optimisation.​
  • Position your MSP as the strategic Copilot partner, not just the licence broker: sell an outcome‑based bundle with defined phases, SLAs, and success metrics.
  • Anchor your pricing to business value (time saved, assisted hours, reduced tickets) using metrics frameworks like “agent assisted hours” and “agent assisted value” from Microsoft Copilot reporting.

Turning Copilot projects into recurring revenue

  • Start every Copilot sale with a paid readiness assessment that covers data estate, permissions, Purview, Entra ID, and Microsoft 365 configuration, feeding into a clear remediation backlog.​
  • Convert “fix‑it” projects (data clean‑up, security baselines, tenant optimisation) into ongoing managed services: data governance, DLP/policy tuning, and configuration drift monitoring.​
  • Wrap deployment work in managed adoption: office hours, role‑based training, and continuous improvement sprints so customers buy an ongoing Copilot enablement service, not a one‑time rollout.​

Recurring revenue levers for monetising Copilot

  • Subscription training: offer tiered Copilot training packages (e.g. Essentials, Power Users, Leadership) delivered on a recurring schedule with refreshers as Microsoft adds features.​
  • Managed Copilot & agents: charge per user and/or per agent for configuration, monitoring, optimisation, and governance, framed as a managed AI workspace service.​
  • Quarterly “AI value reviews”: bundle reports on usage, agent assisted hours, and estimated financial impact into a recurring executive‑facing service.

Monetising Copilot through agents

  • Microsoft is shifting Copilot from a single assistant into a fabric of specialised agents embedded across apps and business workflows, which opens up design, build, and optimisation work for MSPs.​
  • Microsoft’s own guidance and partner material shows customers quickly move from a few agents to a broad catalogue as adoption matures, creating a sustained demand for agent lifecycle management.​
  • Industry commentary around Copilot practices consistently highlights that a typical organisation will end up with roughly a dozen or more agents per employee once AI is fully embedded across roles and processes, a scale that turns Copilot agent design into a major monetising Copilot opportunity for MSPs.​

Agent‑centric services MSPs can monetise

  • Use‑case and agent discovery workshops: run structured sessions with business units to identify high‑value Copilot agent scenarios, estimate ROI, and prioritise a roadmap.​
  • Agent build & configuration: design agents that sit on top of Microsoft 365, line‑of‑business systems, and knowledge bases, priced per agent or per pack.​
  • Agent performance tuning: review conversations, refine prompts and knowledge sources, and iterate on agents as business processes change, sold as a monthly optimisation service.​

Pricing and go‑to‑market for monetising Copilot

  • Blend per‑user and per‑agent pricing so your monetising Copilot strategy scales with customer value; for example, a base “Copilot Managed” fee plus an add‑on for each production agent.​
  • Use Microsoft’s own agent and consumption estimators to forecast expected usage, then build margin into your managed service instead of relying on slim licence resale alone.​
  • Promote time‑limited licence discounts or incentives around Copilot as a way to fund services; position any Microsoft discount as the “budget” that pays for your readiness and enablement package, reinforcing monetising Copilot as a services‑led motion

Speak to us today to learn how we can help your MSP.