Use Microsoft 365 Copilot in Word to Draft Security Reports
For Cybersecurity Analysts ·
What This Does
Microsoft 365 Copilot in Word lets you draft incident reports, risk assessments, and executive summaries directly inside Word by describing what you need — without starting from a blank page.
Before You Start
- Your organization has Microsoft 365 Copilot licensed (the paid add-on, not just Microsoft 365)
- You have Microsoft Word open (desktop or web version at office.com)
- You have your investigation notes ready
Steps
1. Open a new Word document
Start a fresh document in Microsoft Word. If you have a report template your organization uses, open that instead.
2. Find the Copilot button
Look for the Copilot icon in the Home ribbon — it looks like a small colored star/sparkle icon. Alternatively, click inside the document body and look for "Draft with Copilot" appearing as a floating prompt at the top.
What you should see: A "Draft with Copilot" text box that appears when you click into an empty document.
3. Describe what you need
In the Copilot prompt box, type a description of the document you want. Be specific about format and audience.
Examples:
- "Draft an incident report for a phishing attack on 3 employees. Include sections for Executive Summary, Timeline, Affected Systems, Root Cause, Actions Taken, and Recommendations."
- "Write a one-page executive summary of our Q1 security posture for a board audience. Highlight: incidents handled, vulnerabilities patched, and key risks remaining."
4. Review the draft and add your specifics
Copilot generates a full draft. It won't know your specific incident details — that's your job. Click inside the document and edit in your actual data: specific dates, affected systems, IOCs, and actions your team took.
Troubleshooting: If the draft is too generic, click "Regenerate" and add more context to your prompt.
5. Use Rewrite to adjust tone or length
Select any paragraph, right-click and choose "Rewrite with Copilot." Options appear: Make it shorter, Make it longer, Change tone (formal/casual/concise). Use this to trim executive summaries or expand technical sections.
Real Example
Scenario: You've completed a phishing investigation. Three employees clicked a malicious link, one entered credentials. You need an incident report by end of day.
What you type in Copilot: "Draft a security incident report for a spear phishing attack. Three employees received targeted phishing emails disguised as IT helpdesk. One employee submitted credentials. The account was locked within 15 minutes of detection. Write sections: Executive Summary (2 sentences), Timeline (placeholder bullet points), Affected Systems, Actions Taken, and Recommendations."
What you get: A structured draft with professional language. You fill in the real timeline, specific user accounts, and actual actions — saves 60-90 minutes of writing time.
Tips
- Open your incident notes in a second window while editing — Copilot drafts the structure, you fill in the specifics
- Use "Transform" (under Copilot menu) to convert a bullet-pointed investigation summary into full prose
- If your organization has a standard report template, paste it as the document structure first, then use Copilot to fill each section
Tool interfaces change — if a button has moved, look for similar AI/magic/smart options in the same menu area.