Understand how the context, like your work files, web data, or the app you’re using, can affect Copilot responses (AB-730 Exam Prep Hub)

This post is a part of the AB-730: AI Business Professional Exam Prep Hub.
This topic falls under these sections:
Understand generative AI fundamentals (25–30%)
   --> Understand generative AI capabilities across Microsoft 365 experiences
      --> Understand how the context, like your work files, web data, or the app you’re using, can affect Copilot responses


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 important concepts to understand when using Microsoft Copilot is context. Context refers to the information available to Copilot when it generates a response. The quality, relevance, and accuracy of a Copilot response often depend on the context it can access.

For the AB-730 exam, it is important to understand that Copilot does not generate responses solely from the text entered in a prompt. Instead, it combines the prompt with available context from sources such as:

  • The application being used
  • Organizational data and work files
  • Emails and chats
  • Meeting information
  • Documents and spreadsheets
  • Web data (when enabled)
  • Previous conversation history

The more relevant context Copilot has access to, the more useful and personalized its responses can become.


What Is Context?

In generative AI, context is the information that helps the AI understand what the user wants and how it should respond.

Imagine asking:

“Summarize the key points.”

Without context, Copilot would not know what needs to be summarized.

However, if you are working in a Word document, Copilot understands that the request likely refers to the current document. The application provides context that helps Copilot generate an appropriate response.

Context allows Copilot to:

  • Understand the user’s intent
  • Generate more relevant responses
  • Use organizational knowledge when appropriate
  • Tailor outputs to specific tasks
  • Reduce ambiguity

How Copilot Uses Context

When a user submits a prompt, Copilot combines several sources of information:

User Prompt

The prompt provides direct instructions.

Example:

“Create an executive summary of this report.”

Organizational Context

Information from Microsoft 365 may provide additional details such as:

  • Documents
  • Emails
  • Teams chats
  • Meeting transcripts
  • Calendar events
  • SharePoint content
  • OneDrive files

Application Context

The application currently being used often provides important clues.

For example:

  • Word provides document context.
  • Excel provides workbook and worksheet context.
  • Outlook provides email context.
  • Teams provides meeting and conversation context.

Conversation Context

Copilot can often use information from earlier prompts in the same conversation to maintain continuity.

Together, these sources help Copilot generate responses that are more accurate and useful than responses based solely on the prompt.


The Importance of Grounding

A key concept related to context is grounding.

Grounding is the process of connecting AI responses to relevant information sources rather than relying entirely on the model’s pretraining knowledge.

Grounding helps Copilot:

  • Generate responses based on current information
  • Reduce hallucinations
  • Improve accuracy
  • Provide organization-specific insights
  • Reference relevant business content

For example, if you ask:

“What action items were assigned during yesterday’s project meeting?”

Copilot can use meeting transcripts, notes, and related documents to generate a response based on actual business data rather than guessing.


How Work Files Affect Copilot Responses

One of the most powerful sources of context is organizational content stored within Microsoft 365.

Examples include:

  • Word documents
  • Excel workbooks
  • PowerPoint presentations
  • SharePoint files
  • OneDrive content
  • Meeting notes

Suppose a manager asks:

“Summarize the latest sales proposal.”

Copilot can locate and analyze the relevant proposal document that the user has permission to access and create a summary based on its contents.

Similarly, a user might ask:

“What concerns were raised about the product launch?”

Copilot may gather information from emails, meeting notes, and project documents to provide a comprehensive response.

Because Copilot can connect information across multiple sources, it can often provide richer insights than searching through files manually.


How Web Data Affects Copilot Responses

Depending on the Copilot experience being used, web content may also contribute context.

Web grounding can help Copilot:

  • Access current information
  • Reference recent events
  • Incorporate publicly available knowledge
  • Answer questions that require up-to-date information

For example:

“What are the latest trends in generative AI adoption?”

Without web access, a model may rely only on training data.

With web grounding enabled, Copilot can incorporate more current information and trends.

This is especially useful when discussing:

  • Market developments
  • Industry news
  • Competitor information
  • Economic conditions
  • Technology updates

How Application Context Affects Responses

The application being used significantly influences how Copilot interprets a prompt.

The exact same prompt can produce different results depending on the application.

Consider the prompt:

“Create a summary.”

In Word

Copilot assumes the user wants a summary of the current document.

In Outlook

Copilot may summarize an email thread.

In Teams

Copilot may summarize a meeting or chat conversation.

In PowerPoint

Copilot may summarize presentation content.

In Excel

Copilot may summarize trends within a dataset.

This application awareness is one reason Microsoft 365 Copilot feels more specialized and useful than a generic chatbot.


Examples Across Microsoft 365 Applications

Copilot in Word

Context includes:

  • Current document content
  • Document structure
  • Existing text

Example tasks:

  • Summarize reports
  • Rewrite content
  • Generate drafts
  • Improve readability

Copilot in Excel

Context includes:

  • Worksheets
  • Tables
  • Formulas
  • Data relationships

Example tasks:

  • Identify trends
  • Create formulas
  • Generate summaries
  • Analyze data

Copilot in Outlook

Context includes:

  • Email threads
  • Calendar information
  • Contacts

Example tasks:

  • Draft replies
  • Summarize conversations
  • Prioritize emails

Copilot in Teams

Context includes:

  • Meetings
  • Chats
  • Shared files
  • Meeting transcripts

Example tasks:

  • Summarize meetings
  • Identify action items
  • Track decisions

Copilot in PowerPoint

Context includes:

  • Presentation slides
  • Speaker notes
  • Existing content

Example tasks:

  • Create presentations
  • Summarize decks
  • Generate new slides

Permissions Still Matter

Although context improves Copilot responses, access to context remains governed by organizational permissions.

A critical exam concept is:

Copilot can only use information that the user is authorized to access.

For example:

A marketing employee cannot use Copilot to retrieve confidential HR files if they do not already have permission to view those files.

Context improves relevance but does not bypass security controls.


Why Responses May Differ Between Users

Two employees can ask the exact same question and receive different responses.

This occurs because:

  • They may have access to different files.
  • They may belong to different departments.
  • Their permissions may differ.
  • Their conversation history may differ.
  • Their application context may differ.

For example:

An executive asking:

“Summarize our strategic priorities.”

may receive information from leadership presentations and executive planning documents.

A sales representative asking the same question may receive information from sales-related materials they are authorized to access.

This personalization is driven by context and permissions.


How Better Context Improves Prompt Results

Good prompts are important, but context often has an equally significant impact on output quality.

Compare these examples:

Limited Context

“Create a summary.”

Result: Ambiguous response.

Rich Context

“Summarize the Q4 Sales Strategy document and highlight risks mentioned in the executive review section.”

Result: More focused and actionable response.

The combination of a clear prompt and rich context typically produces the best outcomes.


Common Misconceptions

Misconception 1: Copilot only uses the prompt

Reality:

Copilot combines prompts with available contextual information.


Misconception 2: All users receive identical answers

Reality:

Responses vary based on permissions, available data, and context.


Misconception 3: Web information is always used

Reality:

The use of web data depends on the Copilot experience and configuration.


Misconception 4: More context bypasses security

Reality:

Copilot still respects organizational permissions and security controls.


Key Exam Takeaways

For the AB-730 exam, remember the following:

  • Context strongly influences Copilot responses.
  • Context may come from work files, emails, meetings, chats, web data, and application content.
  • Grounding connects responses to relevant information sources.
  • The application being used affects how Copilot interprets prompts.
  • Word, Excel, Outlook, Teams, and PowerPoint each provide unique context.
  • Organizational files can improve response relevance and accuracy.
  • Web data can provide current information when enabled.
  • Different users may receive different responses due to permissions and available context.
  • Copilot respects existing security permissions when accessing contextual information.
  • Combining clear prompts with rich context produces the best results.

Practice Exam Questions

Question 1

What is the primary purpose of context in Microsoft Copilot?

A. To increase storage capacity

B. To help Copilot generate more relevant and useful responses

C. To replace user prompts

D. To bypass security permissions

Answer: B

Explanation

Correct: Context helps Copilot understand the user’s intent and generate more accurate, relevant responses.

Incorrect Answers:

  • A: Context does not affect storage capacity.
  • C: Prompts are still required and remain important.
  • D: Context does not override security controls.

Question 2

Which concept describes using relevant organizational information to improve Copilot responses?

A. Encryption

B. Tenant isolation

C. Grounding

D. Authentication

Answer: C

Explanation

Correct: Grounding connects AI responses to relevant data sources such as documents, emails, and meetings.

Incorrect Answers:

  • A: Encryption protects data.
  • B: Tenant isolation separates organizations.
  • D: Authentication verifies identity.

Question 3

A user asks Copilot to summarize a document currently open in Microsoft Word. Which type of context is primarily being used?

A. Application context

B. Web context

C. Security context

D. Training data context

Answer: A

Explanation

Correct: Word provides application-specific context based on the open document.

Incorrect Answers:

  • B: Web data is not the primary context here.
  • C: Security controls access but does not provide the content.
  • D: The document itself provides the context.

Question 4

How can web data improve Copilot responses?

A. By granting access to internal files

B. By increasing document permissions

C. By removing the need for prompts

D. By providing current information and trends

Answer: D

Explanation

Correct: Web grounding can provide access to recent information not contained in organizational files.

Incorrect Answers:

  • A: Web data does not grant internal access.
  • B: Permissions are unchanged.
  • C: Prompts remain necessary.

Question 5

Which Microsoft 365 application would most likely provide meeting transcript context to Copilot?

A. Excel

B. PowerPoint

C. Teams

D. Word

Answer: C

Explanation

Correct: Teams commonly contains meetings, transcripts, chats, and collaboration content.

Incorrect Answers:

  • A: Excel focuses on data and worksheets.
  • B: PowerPoint focuses on presentations.
  • D: Word focuses on documents.

Question 6

Why might two employees receive different Copilot responses to the same question?

A. Copilot randomly changes answers

B. Their permissions and available context may differ

C. Microsoft assigns different AI models to users

D. Copilot ignores organizational data

Answer: B

Explanation

Correct: Available files, permissions, conversation history, and work context can vary between users.

Incorrect Answers:

  • A: Responses are not random.
  • C: Different models are not the primary reason.
  • D: Organizational data is often a key source of context.

Question 7

Which source is an example of organizational context for Copilot?

A. A user’s SharePoint document

B. A computer monitor

C. A printer

D. A keyboard

Answer: A

Explanation

Correct: SharePoint documents are commonly used as organizational context.

Incorrect Answers:

  • B, C, D: These devices do not provide contextual business content.

Question 8

What happens if a user does not have permission to access a file?

A. Copilot automatically grants access

B. Copilot retrieves the file anyway

C. Copilot shares a partial summary

D. Copilot cannot use that file as context

Answer: D

Explanation

Correct: Copilot respects existing permissions and cannot access unauthorized content.

Incorrect Answers:

  • A: Copilot cannot grant permissions.
  • B: Security controls prevent this.
  • C: Unauthorized files are not used.

Question 9

Which statement best describes application context?

A. It refers to the physical location of the user.

B. It refers to information from public websites.

C. It refers to information available within the application being used.

D. It refers only to previous conversations.

Answer: C

Explanation

Correct: Application context comes from the active application, such as Word, Excel, Outlook, or Teams.

Incorrect Answers:

  • A: User location is not application context.
  • B: That describes web context.
  • D: Conversation history is only one type of context.

Question 10

Which combination is most likely to produce the best Copilot results?

A. Rich context and a clear prompt

B. Rich context only

C. A clear prompt only

D. A long conversation history only

Answer: A

Explanation

Correct: The highest-quality outputs generally result from combining well-written prompts with relevant contextual information.

Incorrect Answers:

  • B: Context helps, but clear instructions remain important.
  • C: Prompts help, but context improves relevance and accuracy.
  • D: Conversation history alone is usually insufficient.

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