Microsoft Copilot interface
Credence Wire

Microsoft Copilot 365 Crosses 50 Million Paid Seats as Enterprise AI Adoption Accelerates

The milestone, disclosed at Microsoft Build, positions Copilot 365 as the fastest-growing product in Microsoft's history, surpassing LinkedIn Premium in time-to-reach 50M paid users by three quarters.

tomasz-kowalski
tomasz-kowalski
3 days ago·7 min read
May 11, 2026

The announcement came quietly on a Tuesday afternoon — the way most consequential news tends to arrive in an era of information abundance. OpenAI's unveiling of what it calls "the most capable model in our history" was accompanied by a short technical report, a live demonstration, and a small group of journalists invited to a San Francisco briefing room with no windows.

The model — GPT-5, in the nomenclature the company has now settled into — is different from its predecessors in ways that matter. The most significant is what the company's researchers call "emergent planning capability": the ability to decompose complex, multi-step tasks into coherent plans and execute them with minimal human guidance.

In the demonstration, researchers showed the system receiving a broad research request — "Analyze the competitive dynamics of the global semiconductor industry over the next decade" — and producing, without additional prompting, a structured research plan, a preliminary analysis framework, and a series of targeted queries that a human analyst might plausibly use to build out a comprehensive report.

What was striking was not the output itself, which was clearly preliminary, but the behavior of the model in producing it. It stopped itself. It flagged uncertainty. It proposed alternative frameworks. It asked follow-up questions about the scope and depth of the analysis it was being asked to produce.

"We've been surprised by some of what it does," said one researcher who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly. "There are behaviors that emerge at this scale that we genuinely did not predict."

The company is careful to frame GPT-5 as a product — a system with commercial applications and enterprise use cases — rather than a research release. The distinction matters: commercial products are launched with marketing narratives, competitive positioning, and pricing tiers. Research releases are meant to be read critically, interrogated, and understood.

This one arrived with both.