Soon, your coworkers in Microsoft Teams might not all be human. Scout, an always-on AI agent announced at Microsoft’s Build developer conference on Tuesday, can go through your work messages, calendar, and email inbox to automate tasks, reschedule meeting conflicts, and draft professional-sounding responses.
Microsoft more or less built an enterprise agent on top of OpenClaw, the AI tool that riveted San Francisco’s early adopters at the start of 2026. Scout is designed specifically to be an assistant for office folks, who can send commands directly in Teams as if the agent was a carbon-based coworker.
Scout is part of Microsoft's larger, agent-first transformation, automating how knowledge workers use software and inserting AI assistants into daily office interactions. “Your company essentially hires your assistant,” says Omar Shahine, the newly appointed corporate vice president of Microsoft Scout. “The whole point of having a personal assistant is that they're working when you're not working.” So, while you’re munching on some Doritos and gossiping next to the office vending machine, Scout is busy blocking off calendar time for next Tuesday’s all-hands meeting and generating talking points based on recent messages.
Microsoft is launching this feature with a small group of customers, with the hope of expanding access soon. In addition to the Teams integration, Microsoft is also testing a desktop app for Scout. This app is rolling out today to subscribers who’ve opted for "frontier" feature access, and it currently requires users also to have an active GitHub Copilot subscription.
If users tell Scout their goals and preferences, the bot can proactively assign tasks. For example, Shahine told Scout always to protect dinnertime with the family, so whenever a meeting was proposed on his calendar during that time, the agent would flag it and automatically suggest rescheduling options to your colleagues.
Courtesy of Microsoft
With access to your email and messages, the AI agent can attempt tasks tailored to your workload. Shahine asked Scout to comb through all his data and make a constantly updated list of every time someone makes a promise to him as well as every time he makes a commitment to someone else. Then, Scout can send reminders to you about open tickets and draft follow-up plans.
Anyone who experiments with Scout should expect some rough edges as Microsoft iterates on this agent. Shahine says his Scout—nicknamed Sebastian—sent an email the other day. “It was just one big run-on sentence, no formatting.” It’s critical to find a balance of what tasks you feel comfortable automating away and what needs to happen under your direct supervision.
Shahine still sees Scout as eventually being a boon to all knowledge workers, especially those who aren’t as technical and wouldn’t feel comfortable operating an agent through the terminal. “Internally our sales organization is probably the largest and fastest growing group that's using this,” he says.