Microsoft builds super app integrating Copilot AI tools and chat Microsoft is building a unified "super app" to consolidate its fragmented Copilot AI tools, including GitHub Copilot, Copilot chat, and a new Autopilot feature, into a single interface targeting a summer 2026 launch. The move comes as fewer than 4.5% of Microsoft's 450 million Microsoft 365 subscribers pay for Copilot, despite the company's $13 billion investment in OpenAI. The project, led by newly appointed Copilot head Jacob Andreou, aims to boost adoption by fixing inconsistent user experiences across the company's decentralized AI teams. Microsoft builds super app integrating Copilot AI tools and chat The tech giant is consolidating its fragmented AI offerings into a single interface, targeting a summer 2026 launch as it tries to fix an adoption problem. Microsoft has a Copilot problem, and the solution apparently involves cramming everything into one app. The company is building an unreleased “super app” that will unify its scattered Copilot AI tools into a single interface, according to a Fortune exclusive. The app will bundle GitHub Copilot, Copilot chat, the Copilot Cowork tool, and a new feature called Autopilot, all accessible from one hub. The adoption gap Microsoft needs to close Microsoft poured $13 billion into OpenAI. It slapped the Copilot brand on practically everything. And yet fewer than 4.5% of its 450 million Microsoft 365 customers actually subscribe to Copilot features. GitHub Copilot tells a different story. The coding assistant has attracted over 4.7 million paid subscribers, with the Pro tier starting at $10 a month. The broader Copilot suite for enterprise and consumer users has been scattered across too many disconnected experiences. The super app is designed to fix exactly that fragmentation. Users will be able to toggle between personal and enterprise accounts from a central hub while still accessing individual tools outside the app if they prefer. New leadership, new urgency The project is being led by Jacob Andreou, who was appointed head of Copilot in March 2026. His promotion is part of a broader executive reshuffle under CEO Satya Nadella, one that signals Microsoft’s acknowledgment that its AI strategy has lost momentum relative to competitors. Microsoft built Copilot features across separate teams, each operating somewhat independently. The result was slower progress, inconsistent user experiences, and adoption rates that don’t match the ambition or the investment. Andreou’s mandate is essentially to centralize what had become a decentralized mess. The targeted launch window is the end of summer 2026. What this means for investors and the competitive landscape Microsoft has 450 million Microsoft 365 users. If the company can move that 4.5% adoption figure to even 10% or 15% through a more intuitive, consolidated product, the revenue implications are substantial. Investors watching Microsoft’s AI narrative should pay close attention to adoption metrics in the quarters following the super app’s launch. The gap between the $13 billion OpenAI investment and the sub-5% conversion rate is the kind of disconnect that eventually demands either results or a reckoning. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .