Microsoft Copilot is great for quick mockups. But when you need native PowerPoint, brand compliance, and enterprise security—you need offgen.
The limitations that matter for professional work.
Microsoft Copilot is a powerful generalist assistant integrated into M365. It is excellent for summarizing documents or drafting basic slides based on Word docs. However, professional consultants find it lacks the precision needed for high-end decks. Copilot often defaults to generic 'Designer' templates rather than strict corporate master slides, and it struggles with complex, data-dense consulting layouts.
While Microsoft Copilot might be suitable for quick mockups or casual use, professional environments demand precision. The inability to edit granular elements, ensure strict adherence to corporate identity, or work offline can be a dealbreaker for strategy consultants and investment bankers.
A side-by-side look at what really matters.
Good for summaries, bad for precise slide construction.
Can make up data or mismatch layouts.
Often defaults to generic office templates.
Built for high-stakes presentations.
Aligns and distributes shapes exactly as needed.
Tailored for business logic, not just language.
Everything you need to know about switching.
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