The biggest challenge with personal AI agents is often figuring out what to do with them. In a home setting, that can be surprisingly tricky.
Take a 24/7 AI agent like Google’s Gemini Spark, which can–on paper–plan meals, manage your calendar, and perform other household tasks.
But while Spark is capable of impressive agentic feats, some early users are finding the agent is hit-or-miss with home-oriented duties like planning summer activities or searching for online coupons. (I’m still waiting my turn to give Spark a try.)
Always-on personal AI agents do their best work in an office setting, where they can work across dozens of projects, organize large meetings, divvy up tasks, and churn out daily status reports.
Enter Scout, Microsoft’s take on the 24/7 personal AI agent, which (for now, at least) is skipping the household and heading straight to the workplace.
Unveiled–fittingly–during Microsoft Build, an annual developer conference, Scout is a “new personal agent for work” that’s “specifically always-on” and “autonomous,” according to the company.
Based in part on OpenClaw, the viral open-source tool that kicked off the whole “personal AI agent” craze, Scout will tap directly into core services like Teams and Outlook, and “proactively handle things like meeting prep, scheduling conflicts, and routine tasks without asking,” Microsoft says.
Scout lives within the new Copilot “superapp” and will be the first of a series of “Autopilots” or enterprise-level AI agents that can be customized for a variety of business-minded purposes. Scout will be the default Autopilot in the revamped Copilot app.
Access to Scout will initially be limited to Microsoft’s enterprise Frontier users, yet another signal that Scout is primarily designed as a corporate AI assistant rather than a household helper.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella had little else to share about Scout during the Build keynote, with Microsoft later promising to “share more soon as we expand what Scout can do and roll it out more broadly.”
The broad strokes of Scout bring to mind another business-minded AI agent that hasn’t been officially announced yet.
Anthropic is said to be working on a “proactive agent” called “Orbit,” which connects to tools like Gmail, Slack, GitHub, Google Calendar, Drive, and Figma.
Like Scout, the rumored Orbit agent is aimed at the workplace–and specifically developers, given the chatter about GitHub and Figma connectors.



