- Microsoft tries to push his chatbot co -pilot Ai, but strikes roadblocks
- Copilot is struggling against rival cat cat
- Chatgpt was launched much earlier, giving the model one step ahead
Chatbot models like Chatgpt and Microsoft Copilot win a huge traction in the workplace and beyond, but the Openai model would begin to show domination in the business world.
A Bloomberg The report said that even companies that bought co -pilot plans are struggling to convince users to change, the manufacturer of AMGEN medication buying a 20,000 user plan, only for employees to continue to use Chatgpt more than a year later.
It is not the only customer to report the problems, because workers escape Microsoft Copilot in favor of Chatgpt, which is used more at home and thus becomes more familiar to a lot.
Ahead
Microsoft uses Openai models to feed the co-pilot and offers very similar features to Chatgpt, with information summaries, e-mail writing, data analysis and an image generation.
That said, the chatgpt momentum and the existing user base seem to give the cat to the advantage.
In June 2025, Chatgpt had nearly 800 million weekly active users and 3 million paid professional users, while Copilot stagnated a little, with 20 million weekly users in the past year.
Theoretically, the race should be a little more uniform, because Windows is an operating system so dominant in the professional world. Microsoft sellers have traditionally been able to use Windows compatibility as an effective sales argument, but this is no longer the case, suggests the report;
“Society [Microsoft’s] The sellers knew that Chatgpt had dominated the consumer chatbot market, but expected Microsoft to have the corporate space for AI assistants thanks to relationships of several decades with corporate IT services. But when Microsoft started selling co -pilot to companies, many office workers had already tried chatgpt at home, giving the chatbot a first engine advantage. »»
Despite negotiations with companies such as Volkswagen, Accenture and Barclays, which have all signed offers for more than 100,000 accounts in chords of tens of millions’ per year, Microsoft is still lagging behind in its user base, and organizations must encourage workers to use the chatbot.
The news occurs after Microsoft has announced large -scale layoffs, with between 6,000 and 7,000 jobs worldwide that should be reduced – amounting to almost 3% of the business workforce – only two years after 10,000 staff were dismissed (5% of the workforce).