How Andreou’s Team Built Copilot Tasks: The AI Agent Revolutionizing Autonomous Task Management
- Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella is relying on a 33-year-old executive, Andreou, to advance the company's AI strategy through the development of a tool called Copilot Tasks.
- Andreou and his development team worked nonstop to launch the tool, according to the Fortune report.
- Fortune reports that if the agent inside Tasks can autonomously order items or manage workflows, it removes the need for human intervention in routine operational steps.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella is relying on a 33-year-old executive, Andreou, to advance the company’s AI strategy through the development of a tool called Copilot Tasks. According to Fortune, the tool utilizes AI agents capable of autonomously performing tasks, such as ordering services, to maintain Microsoft’s competitive position in the AI industry.
Andreou and his development team worked nonstop to launch the tool, according to the Fortune report. The project focuses on moving beyond generative chat toward agentic AI, where the software does not just suggest actions but executes them independently.
How does Copilot Tasks function?
Copilot Tasks employs an AI agent designed for autonomy. Fortune reports that if the agent inside Tasks can autonomously order items or manage workflows, it removes the need for human intervention in routine operational steps.

This shift toward autonomy is intended to integrate AI more deeply into the productivity suites used by Fortune 500 companies, transitioning the technology from a writing assistant to an active operator.
Why is this central to Microsoft’s AI strategy?
Satya Nadella has placed significant trust in Andreou to execute this specific direction for Microsoft’s AI roadmap. The move comes as the company seeks to differentiate its offerings from competitors like Anthropic and its own partner, OpenAI.
While OpenAI provides the underlying models for much of Microsoft’s AI, the development of specialized agents like those in Copilot Tasks allows Microsoft to build proprietary execution layers. This strategy aims to lock in enterprise users by automating complex business processes directly within the Microsoft ecosystem.
