Liquid Zimbabwe Wins Microsoft Copilot Specialisation for M365 Deployments

Liquid Intelligent Technologies Zimbabwe has secured Microsoft’s Copilot Specialisation, Telecompaper reported this week, giving the Harare-based Microsoft partner a formal credential to design, deploy, and manage Copilot across enterprise Microsoft 365 environments in Zimbabwe.
The certification is not a new Microsoft product launch. It is a partner-market signal: Microsoft is saying Liquid Zimbabwe has met the requirements to handle Copilot projects for business customers, including deployment planning, security controls, governance, and customer delivery.

Businessman in front of a city skyline using cloud and document app icons for secure digital collaboration.Why it matters​

For Windows and Microsoft 365 shops, Copilot adoption is increasingly less about turning on a license and more about getting tenant hygiene right before users start asking AI questions across mail, Teams, SharePoint, OneDrive, and Office documents.
Microsoft’s own deployment guidance says organizations need eligible Microsoft 365 licensing, Entra ID accounts, Exchange Online mailboxes, supported apps and browsers, and the right network access before Microsoft 365 Copilot works properly. It also strongly recommends SharePoint governance, Purview labeling, and phased rollout planning.
That is where partner specialisations matter. A bad Copilot rollout can expose overshared SharePoint content, surface stale internal documents, or create confusion about what data the assistant is allowed to use. A certified partner is supposed to bring repeatable deployment methods and security review rather than treating Copilot as a simple add-on.

What Liquid can now do​

According to Telecompaper, Liquid Zimbabwe is now authorised to design, deploy, and manage Microsoft Copilot across Microsoft 365 environments. Regional reports from Etimes and TechnoMag also described the accreditation as part of Liquid’s broader push into enterprise AI services.
For customers, that likely means help with readiness assessments, license planning, identity and access checks, Microsoft 365 data governance, user onboarding, and post-deployment support. It also gives Liquid another Microsoft-aligned service to sell into banks, government-linked organizations, telecoms, retailers, and large private-sector tenants already standardizing on Microsoft 365.

Admin angle​

This does not change Copilot availability or pricing by itself. It does not make Copilot free, and it does not remove the need for Microsoft 365 prerequisites. It simply means Liquid Zimbabwe has cleared Microsoft’s partner bar for Copilot-related delivery.
The practical move for IT teams considering Copilot is still the same: audit permissions, clean up overshared content, confirm Exchange Online and Entra ID readiness, define acceptable-use rules, and run a controlled pilot before broad deployment.
Liquid’s certification gives Zimbabwean Microsoft customers another local route for Copilot implementation, but the success of those deployments will still depend on tenant governance before the first user prompt is entered.

References​

  1. Primary source: Telecompaper
    Published: Wed, 08 Jul 2026 13:32:05 GMT
  2. Official source: news.microsoft.com
  3. Official source: techcommunity.microsoft.com
  4. Related coverage: etimes.co.zw
  5. Related coverage: techrepublic.com
  6. Related coverage: technomag.co.zw
  1. Related coverage: computerworld.com
  2. Related coverage: pymnts.com
  3. Related coverage: techwithafrica.com
  4. Related coverage: windowsforum.com
  5. Related coverage: ad-hoc-news.de
  6. Related coverage: liquid.tech
  7. Official source: fpc.microsoft.com
 

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