Agents you can install this afternoon
Not concepts — complete builds. Each blueprint ships the full instruction set, a manifest on the current v1.7 declarative agent schema, step-by-step deployment, and the governance answers IT will demand before they let it near tenant data.
Policy Pilot — HR answers that cite their sources
A declarative agent that answers employee policy questions from your official HR library, quotes the policy for anything involving money or eligibility, and refuses to guess. The highest-ROI starter agent in most organizations.
▸ Deflects the 40% of HR inbox volume that is people asking questions the handbook already answers.
Briefing Officer — walk into every meeting already caught up
A declarative agent that assembles a pre-meeting brief from your calendar, recent email threads with the attendees, related files, and open commitments — then suggests the questions you should be asking. Personal-productivity agent, zero shared infrastructure required.
▸ Kills the 30 minutes of pre-meeting scramble — inbox archaeology, 'who is this person again', and hunting for the deck someone sent three weeks ago.
Tier Zero — the IT agent that closes tickets before they open
A declarative agent grounded on your IT knowledge base that troubleshoots stepwise — internal KB first, scoped vendor docs second — and escalates with a pre-filled ticket summary when it's genuinely stuck. The low-code variant in Copilot Studio adds a real 'create ticket' action.
▸ Deflects the password-reset, VPN-flaky, 'Outlook is being weird' tickets that make up half of Tier 1 volume — and turns the rest into pre-triaged escalations.
Day One — the onboarding buddy that never gets tired of questions
A declarative agent grounded on your onboarding library and handbook that answers new-hire questions with citations, uses People to explain who owns what, stays warm and patient on the fortieth question, and routes payroll/visa/legal specifics straight to HR.
▸ New hires ask their manager the same question once and then stop asking — not because they know the answer, but because they're afraid to ask twice. Day One absorbs the questions that pride swallows.