Microsoft Copilot Accounting Training Opens Public Cohorts in August

Edgefield Group has opened its AI training programs for accountants to public enrollment and launched a subscription-based AI Learning Hub aimed at firms using Microsoft Copilot in day-to-day work.
As reported by Accounting Today, the consultancy’s new offering takes material previously delivered privately to CPA firms and makes it available to individual professionals, small firms, and pilot groups within larger organizations. The first public cohorts begin in August and will be held live through Microsoft Teams.

Professionals attend an AI-powered accounting training session with collaborative dashboards and virtual assistance.A Copilot-focused training library​

The AI Learning Hub is available through Edgefield’s Insider Edge subscription program. It includes video walkthroughs, prompt libraries, and guided learning paths for accounting-specific uses of Microsoft Copilot, including drafting documents and memos, preparing client communications, and reviewing workpapers.
Firms also get an administration dashboard for assigning training and tracking participation. Edgefield says it will update the material as Microsoft adds Copilot features, a useful distinction from one-off AI workshops that can rapidly age out as Microsoft changes its products and licensing.
The focus is practical adoption rather than generic AI theory. That matters for accounting environments, where staff may handle client records, financial documents, and regulated workflows. Training can improve prompt quality and workflow consistency, but it does not remove the need for firms to set data-handling rules, review AI-generated output, and decide which Copilot capabilities are approved for sensitive material.

Public courses start in August​

The public catalog currently includes four live, cohort-based courses:
  • Claude Foundations, covering everyday accounting use, prompting, and Claude Cowork automation.
  • Microsoft Copilot Foundations, covering Copilot use across Outlook, Teams, Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and the Analyst Agent.
  • Microsoft Copilot Cowork, focused on handing multi-step tasks to Copilot.
  • Microsoft Copilot Agents Workshop, where participants build a lightweight Copilot agent for a specific workflow.
Course prices reportedly range from $295 to $745 per seat, depending on the class, with two to six continuing professional education credits available through Edgefield’s NASBA-sponsored partner. The courses are instructor-led rather than self-paced, which gives firms a controlled way to trial training with a small group before committing to a broader internal program.

Why Windows and Microsoft 365 shops should care​

For organizations already standardized on Microsoft 365, the Copilot courses are the more relevant part of the announcement. Accounting teams frequently live in Outlook, Excel, Word, Teams, and shared document repositories—the same places where Microsoft is introducing more AI-assisted drafting, analysis, and agent features.
That overlap can create a familiar deployment problem for IT: business teams may be ready to experiment before governance, permissions, retention, and training are settled. A targeted course may help users understand the tools, but administrators should still verify tenant configuration, access controls, and approved data sources before employees build or use agents against firm information.
Edgefield’s public cohorts provide a lower-commitment option for accounting teams that want structured Microsoft Copilot training without commissioning a firm-wide engagement.

References​

  1. Primary source: Accounting Today
    Published: 2026-07-14T17:31:13.576000+00:00
 

Back
Top