Innovation depends on freeing people to focus on meaningful work. This customer story shows how Amgen used Microsoft Copilot Studio to build a custom R&D agent in just six weeks -- streamlining workflows, accelerating approvals, and helping teams innovate faster. Read the story to see how autonomous agents can drive measurable business value.
How did Microsoft 365 Copilot help The Salvation Army UK and Ireland manage information overload?
The Salvation Army UK and Ireland supports hundreds of thousands of people every year through more than 650 corps and community centers. That scale created a serious information challenge: documents were scattered across legacy N-drives, SharePoint sites, and multiple systems, and staff were spending too much time searching for the right forms, policies, and case notes.
They had already standardized on Microsoft 365 (Teams, SharePoint, Outlook, Word, Excel), but content was still hard to find. A security audit even revealed staff were using nearly 200 shadow AI tools to cope, which raised data integrity and compliance risks.
By introducing Microsoft 365 Copilot into this environment, the organization was able to:
- Unify access to information across Teams, SharePoint, Outlook, and other Microsoft 365 apps.
- Make documents easier to find and use through natural language prompts instead of manual searching.
- Reduce complexity and risk by consolidating AI usage into a single, governed platform.
As a result, staff can now spend less time navigating systems and more time on direct support, decision-making, and human connection with the people they serve.
What practical benefits are staff seeing from Copilot day to day?
For The Salvation Army UK and Ireland, Copilot has become a practical assistant rather than a novelty. Teams are using it to save hours per task, reduce stress, and improve clarity in their work. Some specific examples include:
- Faster reporting: Administrators can now turn around reports that previously took hours in about five minutes, freeing time for frontline work.
- Better drafting and communication: Communications staff use Copilot to quickly draft donor updates and event briefs, often finding that the formatting, structure, and clarity are stronger than their initial drafts.
- Policy and legal support: The legal team uses Copilot to review and align internal policies with current legislation, speeding up analysis and reducing manual effort.
- Language and accessibility: Frontline teams use Copilot to translate emails into target languages and rewrite reports in simpler formats, including versions suitable for children, making communication more inclusive.
- Idea generation and planning: Staff use Copilot to jumpstart complex projects, organize ideas, and overcome “blank page” moments when they feel stuck or overwhelmed.
Beyond productivity, there is also an emotional benefit. One colleague described using Copilot for a complex task and completing it in record time, calling it a “weight off her shoulders.” That sense of relief and support is now a recurring theme as more employees integrate Copilot into their daily workflows.
How did The Salvation Army build trust and prepare for future AI use?
The Salvation Army UK and Ireland knew that successful AI adoption would depend on trust and hands‑on experience, not just technology deployment. Staff had concerns about privacy and whether AI might replace jobs, so the organization focused on showing how Copilot could support people in the work they already do.
Their approach included:
- Starting small with early adopters: They launched with a group of about 150 early users, offering targeted training, “promptathons,” and one‑on‑one guidance.
- Focusing on discovery, not mandates: Instead of pushing usage, they created opportunities for staff to try Copilot, experience “aha” moments, and then share those stories with colleagues. Even initial skeptics began requesting access once they saw the value.
- Using a Center of Excellence: An internal Microsoft Center of Excellence, which regularly collaborates with Microsoft, guided the rollout and helped shape a cohesive, scalable AI strategy.
Looking ahead, The Salvation Army is exploring how to reimagine workflows with AI agents using tools like Copilot Studio. Early ideas include:
- A volunteer chatbot to answer common questions.
- An agent that scans case notes to flag high‑risk situations.
- An AI assistant that drafts impact reports before they are requested.
Throughout, the guiding principles are clarity, compassion, and usefulness. The goal is not to replace people, but to lighten the administrative load so staff can focus on the human work that only they can do.