Microsoft claims Copilot and ChatGPT are synonymous, but three-quarters of its AI division pay out of pocket for OpenAI's superior offering because the Redmond giant won't allow them to expense it.
Microsoft Copilot (formerly Bing Chat) and ChatGPT are arguably the most popular AI chatbots with broad adoption across the world. However, the latter has a health lead. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella attributed its broad adoption to OpenAI having a 2-year runway to build and develop ChatGPT uncontested.
Interestingly, a separate report suggested that the top complaint about Copilot to Microsoft's AI division is that "Copilot isn't as good as ChatGPT." Microsoft dismissed the claim, attributing it to poor prompt engineering skills. The company blatantly indicated that users weren't leveraging the tool's capabilities as intended, hence the disappointing user experience.
While Microsoft has since launched Copilot Academy to remedy the situation, a new report by Bloomberg Businessweek seemingly corroborates the rising complaints about Copilot and its user experience.
According to some Microsoft insiders, the report details that Satya Nadella's vision for Microsoft Copilot wasn't clear. Following the hype surrounding ChatGPT's launch, Microsoft wanted to hop on the AI train, too.
A dedicated software team showcased demos with OpenAI-powered functions built into Office programs, but Nadella wasn't pleased, further indicating that something was still missing. “This feels like just a set of features,” Nadella added.
As such, the team took a different approach that bundled OpenAI's technology into a single assistant, Microsoft Copilot. According to a former Microsoft Copilot product manager, Microsoft AI assistants are inconsistent, partly due to poor coordination between teams and the company's rigidity to risk it all with AI. “It felt like there were 13 different Copilots,” a former Microsoft design leader added.
Interestingly, while Microsoft Copilot garnered user interest, many customers reportedly discovered it was an inferior product with a degraded user experience compared to OpenAI's ChatGPT.
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