Create a new document from a prompt (AB-730 Exam Prep)

This post is a part of the AB-730: AI Business Professional Exam Prep Hub.
This topic falls under these sections:
Draft and analyze business content by using AI (25–30%)
   --> Draft business documents and communications
      --> Create a new document from a prompt


Note that there are 10 practice questions (with answers) at the end of each section to help you solidify your knowledge of the material. Also, there are 2 practice tests with 60 questions each available from the hub's main page below the exam topics section.

Introduction

One of the most valuable capabilities of Microsoft 365 Copilot is its ability to create entirely new business documents from natural language prompts. Instead of starting with a blank page, users can describe what they need, and Copilot generates a first draft that can then be reviewed, refined, and customized.

For the AB-730: AI Business Professional exam, it is important to understand that Copilot assists with content creation but does not replace human judgment. Users remain responsible for reviewing accuracy, tone, and completeness.


What Does “Create a New Document from a Prompt” Mean?

Creating a new document from a prompt means providing Copilot with instructions in plain language so that it can generate content based on:

  • The user’s request
  • Context from Microsoft 365 data (when permitted)
  • Existing files referenced in the prompt
  • The application being used

Examples include:

  • Creating a project proposal
  • Drafting a policy document
  • Producing meeting summaries
  • Writing marketing plans
  • Building training materials
  • Creating reports or executive summaries

Instead of manually writing every section, users describe their goal and Copilot produces an initial draft.


How the Process Works

Step 1: Start a New Document

Open Word and select Copilot.

Step 2: Enter a Prompt

Examples:

  • “Create a proposal for migrating our sales reports to Microsoft Fabric.”
  • “Draft a one-page executive summary for a cybersecurity awareness program.”
  • “Write a customer onboarding guide for new employees.”

Step 3: Add Context (Optional)

Copilot can use:

  • Existing files
  • Emails
  • Meeting notes
  • Teams conversations
  • Documents you reference

Example:

Create a project charter using the information in the “Migration Requirements.docx” file.

Step 4: Generate the Draft

Copilot produces structured content that may include:

  • Titles
  • Headings
  • Bullet lists
  • Tables
  • Summaries
  • Recommendations

Step 5: Review and Refine

Users can then request:

  • More detail
  • Shorter text
  • Different tone
  • Additional sections
  • Formatting changes

Why Starting from a Prompt Is Valuable

Traditional document creation often involves:

  • Research
  • Organizing ideas
  • Creating structure
  • Writing content

Copilot accelerates these tasks by producing a usable first draft.

Benefits include:

Faster Content Creation

Users spend less time creating documents from scratch.

Improved Productivity

Routine writing tasks are completed more quickly.

Consistent Structure

Copilot automatically creates organized sections and headings.

Reduced Writer’s Block

Users begin with a draft rather than a blank page.

Easier Iteration

Documents can be refined through follow-up prompts.


Characteristics of Effective Prompts

Good prompts generally include:

Goal

What should be created?

Example:

Create a training guide.

Audience

Who will read it?

Example:

For new employees.

Tone

Professional, formal, friendly, executive, etc.

Example:

Use a professional tone.

Length

One page, three sections, detailed report, and so on.

Context

Reference files or information when available.


Example of a Weak Prompt

Write something about security.

Result:

  • Too vague
  • Limited context
  • Generic response

Example of a Strong Prompt

Create a two-page cybersecurity awareness guide for employees. Include password best practices, phishing prevention, and safe remote work recommendations. Use a professional tone.

Result:

  • More focused output
  • Better organization
  • Higher-quality draft

Using Existing Files to Improve Document Creation

Copilot can reference files to produce more relevant content.

Example:

Create an executive summary based on the Q2 Sales Report and Customer Survey Results files.

Benefits:

  • Uses organizational knowledge.
  • Produces context-aware drafts.
  • Reduces manual copying and summarization.

Copilot only accesses files that the user already has permission to view.


Iterative Refinement

Generated documents are rarely final versions.

Users can continue the conversation:

  • “Add a risks section.”
  • “Rewrite this for executives.”
  • “Make the tone more conversational.”
  • “Convert bullets into paragraphs.”
  • “Shorten this to one page.”

This conversational approach improves quality over multiple iterations.


Human Review Is Essential

Although Copilot creates drafts quickly, users should verify:

Accuracy

Ensure facts and figures are correct.

Completeness

Confirm important information was not omitted.

Tone

Make sure wording matches the intended audience.

Compliance

Verify the document follows company policies.

Formatting

Adjust styles and layouts as needed.

Copilot is an assistant, not the final decision maker.


Common Business Scenarios

Organizations frequently use Copilot to create:

Project Proposals

  • Objectives
  • Scope
  • Deliverables

Meeting Reports

  • Decisions
  • Action items
  • Summaries

Training Materials

  • Instructions
  • Procedures
  • Learning objectives

Customer Communications

  • Announcements
  • Responses
  • Guides

Executive Summaries

  • Key findings
  • Recommendations
  • Business impacts

Policy Documents

  • Standards
  • Procedures
  • Guidelines

Best Practices

Be Specific

Provide clear instructions.

Include Audience and Tone

Tailor output for readers.

Reference Relevant Files

Add context when possible.

Refine Through Follow-Up Prompts

Improve drafts iteratively.

Verify Information

Review before sharing.

Treat the First Draft as a Starting Point

Human expertise remains essential.


Exam Tips

For the AB-730 exam, remember:

  • Copilot can create new documents from natural language prompts.
  • Specific prompts generally produce better results.
  • Referencing files provides additional context.
  • Generated content should always be reviewed.
  • Copilot accelerates document creation but does not replace human oversight.
  • Iterative prompting improves document quality.
  • Users remain responsible for final content.

Practice Exam Questions


Question 1

What is the primary advantage of creating a new document with Microsoft 365 Copilot?

A. It permanently replaces human writers.
B. It eliminates the need for document review.
C. It creates an initial draft more quickly than starting from a blank page.
D. It guarantees completely accurate content.

Correct Answer: C

Explanation: Copilot speeds up document creation by generating a first draft. Human review is still required.


Question 2

Which prompt would likely produce the best output?

A. “Write something.”
B. “Create a two-page onboarding guide for new employees using a professional tone.”
C. “Do work.”
D. “Generate words.”

Correct Answer: B

Explanation: Specific prompts provide goals, audience, and tone, leading to better results.


Question 3

After Copilot generates a document, what should users do next?

A. Publish it immediately.
B. Ignore formatting.
C. Delete the draft.
D. Review and refine the content.

Correct Answer: D

Explanation: Human oversight remains essential to verify quality and accuracy.


Question 4

Why might a user reference existing files when creating a document?

A. To provide additional context for Copilot.
B. To bypass security permissions.
C. To disable Copilot.
D. To prevent editing.

Correct Answer: A

Explanation: Referenced files help Copilot generate more relevant and context-aware responses.


Question 5

Which type of content can Copilot help create?

A. Project proposals only.
B. Emails only.
C. Training guides only.
D. Various business documents including reports, proposals, and summaries.

Correct Answer: D

Explanation: Copilot supports many different document types.


Question 6

What is an example of iterative prompting?

A. Closing Word after generating content.
B. Printing the first draft immediately.
C. Asking Copilot to add a risks section after generating the document.
D. Refusing to modify the output.

Correct Answer: C

Explanation: Iterative prompting means improving output through additional instructions.


Question 7

Which statement about Copilot-generated documents is true?

A. They always contain perfect information.
B. They should be considered final versions.
C. They do not require human review.
D. They are starting points that users can refine.

Correct Answer: D

Explanation: Generated drafts should be edited and validated by users.


Question 8

What information most improves prompt quality?

A. Audience, tone, and desired outcome.
B. Random keywords only.
C. Very short instructions without context.
D. Unrelated file references.

Correct Answer: A

Explanation: Providing context and expectations helps Copilot create better content.


Question 9

Which business scenario is appropriate for creating a new document from a prompt?

A. Drafting a project proposal.
B. Preparing a training manual.
C. Writing an executive summary.
D. All of the above.

Correct Answer: D

Explanation: Copilot supports a wide range of business writing tasks.


Question 10

Which statement best describes Microsoft 365 Copilot’s role in document creation?

A. It replaces human expertise.
B. It assists users by generating drafts and suggestions.
C. It guarantees regulatory compliance.
D. It prevents users from editing content.

Correct Answer: B

Explanation: Copilot acts as an AI assistant that helps users create and refine content while humans remain responsible for the final result.


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