This post is a part of the PL-300: Microsoft Power BI Data Analyst Exam Prep Hub; and this topic falls under these sections:
Visualize and analyze the data (25–30%)
--> Create reports
--> Use Copilot to Create a New Report Page
Note that there are 10 practice questions (with answers and explanations) at the end of each topic. Also, there are 2 practice tests with 60 questions each available on the hub below all the exam topics.
Where This Topic Fits in the Exam
The PL-300: Microsoft Power BI Data Analyst exam increasingly emphasizes modern report authoring features, including the use of Copilot. Within the Create reports skill area, this topic evaluates your understanding of how AI-assisted tools can accelerate report creation while still requiring analyst judgment to validate results.
You are not tested on Copilot prompt engineering in depth, but rather on:
- What Copilot can do
- When it should be used
- Its prerequisites and limitations
- How it fits into the report-building workflow
What Is Copilot in Power BI?
Copilot in Power BI is an AI-powered assistant that helps report authors generate content using natural language prompts. When used to create a new report page, Copilot can:
- Automatically add a new page to an existing report
- Suggest and place visuals based on the data model
- Select fields, measures, and basic layouts
- Apply default formatting and titles
Copilot accelerates report creation but does not replace the analyst’s responsibility for data accuracy, business logic, or design refinement.
What Does “Create a New Report Page with Copilot” Mean?
Using Copilot to create a new report page typically involves:
- Prompting Copilot with a business question or request
(for example, asking for a page that analyzes sales performance) - Allowing Copilot to generate:
- A new page
- One or more visuals
- Suggested fields and aggregations
- Reviewing, editing, and refining the generated content
The resulting page is a starting point, not a finished product.
Why This Matters for PL-300
Microsoft includes Copilot topics to ensure analysts understand:
- How AI can speed up report authoring
- The boundaries of AI-generated content
- When manual intervention is still required
Exam scenarios often frame Copilot as a productivity tool, not a source of authoritative analysis.
Prerequisites and Requirements
To use Copilot in Power BI:
- The tenant must have Copilot enabled
- The user must have appropriate Power BI licensing
- The dataset must be compatible and accessible
- The data model should be well-designed with:
- Clear table and column names
- Proper relationships
- Meaningful measures
A poorly modeled dataset will lead to poor Copilot output.
What Copilot Does Well
Copilot is well suited for:
- Quickly scaffolding a new report page
- Generating common business visuals (charts, tables, KPIs)
- Suggesting relevant fields and measures
- Helping users get started faster
It excels when:
- The data model is clean and intuitive
- The business request is high-level
- Speed is more important than precision in the first draft
What Copilot Does Not Do
Copilot does not:
- Validate business definitions
- Guarantee correct aggregations
- Replace DAX expertise
- Understand nuanced business rules
- Automatically optimize report performance
For the exam, it’s important to recognize that Copilot output must be reviewed and adjusted.
Copilot vs Manual Report Creation
| Aspect | Copilot | Manual |
|---|---|---|
| Speed | Very fast | Slower |
| Control | Lower initially | Full |
| Accuracy | Depends on model | Analyst-defined |
| Best use | First draft | Final refinement |
PL-300 scenarios often expect you to choose Copilot when rapid report creation is required, not when precision logic must be built from scratch.
Best Practices When Using Copilot
From an exam and real-world perspective:
- Use Copilot to accelerate, not finalize
- Always validate fields, filters, and aggregations
- Refine visual types and formatting manually
- Ensure the page aligns with business goals and storytelling
Copilot should be viewed as an assistant, not an authority.
Exam Focus — How This Topic Is Tested
PL-300 questions typically:
- Ask when Copilot is an appropriate choice
- Test understanding of Copilot’s role in report creation
- Contrast Copilot-generated pages with manual design
- Emphasize the need for review and refinement
Example exam framing:
“A user wants to quickly create a new report page summarizing key metrics. Which feature should they use?”
The correct answer often involves Copilot, followed by analyst validation.
Summary
For the Use Copilot to create a new report page topic, you should understand:
- What Copilot can generate automatically
- The requirements for using Copilot
- Its strengths and limitations
- How it fits into the report-authoring lifecycle
- Why analyst oversight is still required
This topic reflects Microsoft’s direction toward AI-assisted analytics, while reinforcing that strong data modeling and visualization skills remain essential for PL-300 success.
Practice Questions
Go to the Practice Exam Questions for this topic.
