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The next chapter for AI-powered work management in Microsoft Planner

ShreeShastha's avatar
ShreeShastha
Icon for Microsoft rankMicrosoft
Nov 20, 2025

Today at Microsoft Ignite, we’re excited to share the next major evolution in work management—one that builds on the journey we began in April 2024, when we unified Microsoft To Do, Planner, and Project for the web into a single, modern experience we called the new Planner. Now available in Microsoft Teams and as a web app, Planner has further been enhanced with the Project Manager Agent, an AI-powered assistant that helps streamline your planning process.

Now, we’re taking the next step by bringing advanced AI skills through Project Manager Agent to our platform—delivering intelligent automation and a seamless planning environment that can help empower teams to move faster, stay aligned, and deliver results with less friction.

A day in the life: From conversation to coordination

It’s Monday morning. A product launch team gathers—some in person, some remote. Instead of action items getting lost in chat threads or emails, Facilitator and Project Manager Agent are now part of the meeting experience.

  • During the meeting, Facilitator listens for spoken intent and captures decisions as actionable tasks. Team members can also prompt Facilitator through the meeting chat to add, update, or assign tasks in real time. This ensures that nothing is missed and that tasks are created directly from the flow of conversation.
  • Project Manager Agent structures these tasks within Planner, assigning owners and due dates as directed by the team. The agent helps team members organize and track their work efficiently by making it easier to create, assign, and update tasks within Teams meetings.
  • Furthermore, the Project Manager Agent works alongside Facilitator to generate a marketing plan, so the team can use the document as a reference for stakeholders. The agents are able to create the document, pulling context from the meeting transcript, meeting chat, and files shared during the meeting. The document is posted in the meeting chat and is also available as an attachment to the task in the meeting plan.
  • As the meeting wraps up, the plan is live in Planner, with clear ownership and next steps. Everyone leaves the meeting aligned, knowing exactly what needs to be done and who is responsible.

This is the story we’re showcasing at Ignite: how Planner and agents are helping teams drive work across Teams.

What’s rolling out soon to general availability

Below is a list of features that are currently available in public preview and rolling out to general availability in the next two weeks.

Project Manager Agent skills in Teams meetings: Leveraging the skills of Project Manager Agent, Facilitator can create tasks during meetings and automatically extract tasks from meeting transcripts to ensure nothing is overlooked. These tasks are captured in meeting notes and seamlessly synced to Planner for enhanced post-meeting tracking. Additionally, the Facilitator can generate documents from meetings, helping resolve the "cold start" challenge. Simply @mention Facilitator to create, assign, or access tasks, or to generate required documents.

A screenshot of a Teams meeting shows a conversation with Facilitator in the Meeting chat. A user has tasked Facilitator to assign a task to Sarah and set the due date to Friday.

Project Manager Agent skills in Teams channels: Leveraging the skills of Project Manager Agent in Teams channels, users can create tasks, set due dates, and assign tasks seamlessly within their collaborative workspace by @mentioning the respective Channel Agent.

Learn more about Project Manager Agent skills in Teams meetings and channels in our announcement blog post.

What’s new for Project Manager Agent and Planner

Below is a list of features that are new to Project Manager Agent, Channel Agent in Teams, and Planner.

Workback plans in Teams channels: Project Manager Agent and the Channel Agent together now support the creation of AI-powered workback plans, automatically generating a reverse timeline of tasks and milestones based on the target deadline and goal provided.

 

A screenshot of a Teams channel shows a conversation with the Channel Agent. The Channel Agent has created a workback plan with tasks and due dates.

Ask questions about your plans in Teams channels: You can now ask the Channel Agent questions related to your plans in Planner. Simply @mention the Channel Agent directly in your channel conversation with questions such as: What tasks are assigned to me? What tasks need to be completed this week?

Create and update tasks with Channel Agent: You can also ask the Channel Agent to create new tasks and update existing ones. Simply @mention the Channel Agent with prompts such as: Create a task to complete the Quarterly Business Review deck. Assign the LT review prep task to Daniel. For more information, see how to create project tasks using Channel Agent.

Status reports with Planner data: Channel Agent uses its knowledge to create status reports for channel members. These status reports are delivered as a Loop file within the channel, allowing team members to review, edit, collaborate, and share with others.

Previously, the Channel Agent would generate status reports based on messages in its respective channel, as well as meeting summaries for any meetings the agent was added to. Now, status reports generated by the Channel Agent are enriched with Planner data to provide additional context, improve project visibility for all stakeholders, and enable better decision making by highlighting progress, risks, and blockers. Learn how to generate a status report using Channel Agent.

Please note, these new capabilities in Teams channels are currently available in public preview. A Microsoft 365 Copilot license is required to create, interact with, and manage Channel Agent in Teams. Learn how to get started with Channel Agent for Teams channels.

Support for Information Barriers: Microsoft Purview Information Barriers are policies in Microsoft 365 that a compliance admin can configure to prevent individuals or groups from communicating and collaborating with each other. Support for Information Barriers in Planner enables organizations to restrict access to plans and tasks based on user groups. This feature can help prevent data leaks, enforce internal policies, and support regulatory mandates by limiting plan visibility and collaboration to authorized segments.

Support for Information Barriers is now generally available in basic plans only across:

  • Planner for the web
  • Planner in Teams (web, desktop, and mobile)

Learn more about Information Barriers in Microsoft Planner.

What’s coming soon to Planner

Below is a list of additional compliance features that are currently rolling out or starting to roll out in Planner next month. Please note, these features are not being demoed at Ignite. Check the Microsoft 365 public roadmap for rollout status and additional details.

Microsoft Information Protection (MIP) label support in Planner: Up until now, Planner has supported container labels for Microsoft 365 Group-backed and Roster plans, restricting access based on label permissions. This update will enable support for content labels, enforcing Data Loss Prevention controls, such as:

  • Preventing users from copying task content, exporting plans to Excel or other formats, and forwarding tasks or plans to unauthorized users.
  • Restricting users from printing plans or tasks when the content label includes a “block print” directive and restricting users from any form of hard copy generation of sensitive plans.
  • Displaying watermarks on plans and tasks when required and ensuring watermark visibility across all supported clients (web, desktop, and mobile).
  • Inheriting content labels from Loop Task List components or other linked containers, applying the same restriction to the Roster plan created from a Loop file, and respecting label changes.
  • Informing users when label restrictions are in effect, preventing actions that violate label policies, and offering downgrade prompts if label changes would revoke access for certain users.

With this rollout, users will be able to apply and modify content labels on Group-backed plans. Roster plans created from meetings will inherit the meeting label.

eDiscovery support for Roster plans: Up until now, Planner has only provided eDiscovery support for modern Group-backed plans. This update will enable eDiscovery support for Roster plans as well. Once rolled out to your organization, admins will be able to pull the task data relevant to a user by selecting the individual’s mailbox. When the eDiscovery admin selects a user’s mailbox as the data source, they would see the task that the user was assigned to.

Join our sessions at Ignite 2025!

Whether you’re on site at the Moscone Center or joining us online, dive deeper with demos and Q&A. We’ll share additional details on the features above and announce some exciting updates coming soon to Planner.

  • Theater session (THR761):
    Accelerating productivity with Planner and Project Manager agent in Microsoft Teams
    Time: Thursday, November 20 at 10:00 AM Pacific
    Speakers: George Bullock, Robyn Guarriello
    Duration: 25 minutes (in person, live Q&A)
  • Breakout session (BRK287):
    Planner & agents: Driving work across Teams, Outlook, and Copilot Chat
    Time: Thursday, November 20 at 4:45 PM Pacific
    Speakers: Howard Crow, Robyn Guarriello
    Duration: 45 minutes (in person, streamed live, and on demand)
  • Expert meetups:
    Visit the Copilot & Agents station for hands-on demos and unblocked Q&A with product experts.

Learn more

Updated Dec 06, 2025
Version 3.0

10 Comments

  • Everyone everyone!  I figured it out.  You know what this entire migration/consolidation feels like?  A bunch of executives making a decision that impacts products they've likely never personally used to any considerable extent, much less knowing anything about the back-end differences between the products.

    And then the person placed/forced to be in charge of this transition (a CIO or PMO leader perhaps), who probably knew right away that the executives had no idea what they were actually talking about, but had to be the one to take responsibility and accountability, either quit or got fired.  And here we are.

    Which means, to me personally, we’re probably screwed and/or will be slow-walked moving forward.  That is unless we get lucky and there’s a Maverick-style leader at Microsoft willing to take over this project, cause all I’m seeing from Microsoft is people posting who I’ve never heard of and don’t even know if they’re credentialed enough to know what they’re talking about.

  • tvaughn12's avatar
    tvaughn12
    Iron Contributor

    Respectfully adding the list of functional updates that Planner users actually want to see (not AI, colorful backgrounds, etc), which we have been communicating to Microsoft for months or years. For context, my team has been using Project for the Web (now Premium Planner) for 4 years. We have >100 plans with 2-3 dozen tasks each that six staff members utilize. 

    • Any features that basic Planner has, Premium Planner should have. These feel like two completely disconnected technologies, with basic Planner often having the more-desired features already in place. Why are we paying more for less?
    • Ability to edit Premium Plan tasks and see Buckets in the My Tasks tab. THIS IS VITAL. With the number of tasks/plans my team has, it is so annoying to have the extra step of navigating to the Plan to make a note or change the assignee.
    • Portfolios, while a good concept, is not very useful because you can't sort rows or link to the Plan. 
    • The My Plans page is weak and needs an upgrade. No option to view all Plans you are apart of and sort them by columns. The search feature will often say it can't find a plan and prompts me to click a "Search more Plans" button and then it will find it. Why doesn't it perform a search of all plans initially?
    • Ability to prevent others from deleting tasks or Plans and the ability to restore tasks or Plans. 
    • Embed Premium Plans in SharePoint.
    • If the long-term plan is to keep the mobile app, ability to view/edit Premium Plans on the app.

    The following are courtesy of OwenJones from August 2025 blog:

    • Backup, recovery and archiving for the default environment, either for whole plans or buckets.
    • Manage tasks across multiple projects, e.g. allow the same task in multiple projects, or create inter-project dependencies.
    • Give line managers ability to control incoming work requests vs capacity, and report/plan resource utilization across projects.
    • Make effort calculations realistic - could be done by exposing the Schedule Mode and Hours per day options in the main Teams/SharePoint interface instead of hiding them in the Power App which is obscure.
    • If you must develop Copilot features, then focus on predictable automation of repetitive functions, not trying to act like a full-scale PM. Copilot should be very low priority though, the basics above are much more important..
    • Above all, seek and act on real feedback from real PMs and resource managers, not marketing diktat. A lot of development effort seems to have been diverted recently onto features no-one is asking for, with very little benefit.
  • lucasdaels's avatar
    lucasdaels
    Brass Contributor

    Oh wow, fantastic news! Now every single meeting can lovingly spawn its own dedicated Planner plan, complete with AI-generated tasks that definitely won’t duplicate the ones from last week’s meeting about the same thing. Truly living the dream: soon I’ll need a separate Planner plan just to keep track of all my Planner plans. Productivity peaked, everyone! 

    Clearly the Microsoft UX team graduated top of their class from the prestigious “Advanced Principles of Almost-But-Not-Quite-**bleep**-Enough-To-Make-People-Flee-To-Competitors” certification course. Gold stars all around.

    Credit where it’s due: Copilot’s facilitator mode and AI meeting notes are genuinely good—accurate transcripts, reliable action items, solid summaries.

    The tragedy is that all this high-quality structured data then gets dumped into another isolated Planner silo with almost no integration into Loop, To Do, Project, or anywhere else people actually work. So much potential, left completely on the table.

    • Glad that I wasn't the one who said it! "Planner Basic, Planner Premium and Planner with PM" 🤣 They just merged the old stuff into one UI and gave them new names. Canvas PowerApp Connectors doesn't work as they should, and instead of having the same back-end (Integration into Loop, MS Project Desktop, PowerApps, PowerBI ...), someone thinks what new names to use. I think "Planner Medium Rare with Copilot Pro" would be a great name for the next add-on.

    • ShreeShastha's avatar
      ShreeShastha
      Icon for Microsoft rankMicrosoft

      Thank you for feedback. We recognize the problems that you bring up, and in the upcoming months, you will hear more about how these problems will be addressed with some of the upcoming changes as this feature matures (specifically the meetings and planner integration).

      • CourtBoda's avatar
        CourtBoda
        Iron Contributor

        ShreeShastha​ Is this accurate that it will create a new planner plan for each meeting? Or is there a way if you create your meeting utilizing the Teams Channel, will it link that meeting or meeting cadence and subsequent recordings / tasks to the Planner that is created within that Team / the group that connects it all? That would be an ideal flow for this for future consideration :) 

  • Hmm.  I have so many questions, but since there's a 5% chance any of them will be answered anway, and 1% in any complete or satisfactory way, I will ask one question:

    When can I expect the mobile Planner app to recognize Premium Plans? 

    I really hope you're not planning to just wait for the "unification of basic and premium plans" and then worry about the mobile app?  God may take forever.  Or (probably not as surprising at this point) there never was and never will be any plans to use a Planner mobile app (outside of Teams) ever again?

    Let's see...I pay....O365 E3 licenses...Planner And Project Plan 3...M365 Copilot Pro....yet no mobile app.  And navigating the website on mobile is literally the worst case of scaling I've ever seen.  It's unusable.

    Anywho, I won't hold my breath waiting for a response.  Please, surprise me and respond, I beg of you.

    • PetrKrenzelok's avatar
      PetrKrenzelok
      Iron Contributor

      Planner app will not easily "recognize" Premium Plans. It can't. Once you understand, how this so called unification of backends just ended up like a total fiasco, you would not raise such a question. MS just basically renamed Project for the Web to the Planner Premium and that's basically it. Or can you see unified comments sections? Can you see the same level of info on a canban task cards? Can you see the Basic Plans being available to Portfolios / Roadmap? But yes, you can have useless AI agent, which will create a task for you and then sends you to fill in other info, as we can see with the included screenshot. And as for the mobile app? MS would really surprise me here, but what I expect is, that they will terminate Planner mobile app one day.

      • AdamWithTechnologyBiased's avatar
        AdamWithTechnologyBiased
        Brass Contributor

        Oh PetrKrenzelok​ I am very familiar with the back-end.  I've spent hours...actually the equivalent of days upon days, navigating Basic vs Premium plans in Power Automate, Power Apps, and MS Graph or whatever it's called, and the like.  I love how I have to pay even more for Power Automate Premium in order to have it even recognize Premium Plans in its automations!  It makes me feel like Microsoft really cares about us, so warm and fuzzy inside.   Let's eliminate the need for PMs and replace them with "Agentic AI" so companies can outsource the work to off-shore teams that know how to use ChatGPT.

        And I agree, it's almost a forgone conclusion they are 'folding' the mobile Planner app.... into Teams.