Microsoft Just Reshuffled Its Entire AI Organization. Should Investors Be Worried -- or Excited?

Motley Fool
2026.04.01 12:57

Microsoft has reorganized its Copilot AI operation, unifying consumer and commercial efforts under Jacob Andreou. AI chief Mustafa Suleyman will focus on superintelligence and new AI models. This restructuring aims to boost Microsoft's 15 million paying Copilot accounts and compete with OpenAI's 50 million subscribers. Microsoft plans to recoup its $145 billion AI infrastructure costs and has introduced a new $99 price tier for enterprise Copilot. The move is seen as a strategic refocus to enhance AI competitiveness and revenue generation, with concerns only arising if significant growth doesn't materialize soon.

Microsoft (MSFT +3.06%) reorganized its Copilot artificial intelligence (AI) operation in mid-March, bringing its consumer and commercial AI efforts under a unified Copilot organization, now run by former Snap executive Jacob Andreou. At the same time, Microsoft AI chief Mustafa Suleyman will now focus more on superintelligence and on developing new AI models for the company.

It's a big shake-up, and it comes as Microsoft is trying to boost its paid AI users to accelerate growth that can justify its nearly $145 billion in capital expenditures this year, mostly for AI. And it's probably a smart move to make right now.

Image source: Getty Images.

Microsoft is focusing on models and monetization

Microsoft has about 15 million paying Copilot accounts right now, which sounds respectable until you compare it to OpenAI's 50 million paying ChatGPT subscribers. What's worse is that OpenAI estimates it will reach 220 million paying subscribers by 2030.

Rising competition from AI companies is spurring Microsoft to focus its attention, and so is the fact that Microsoft is on pace to spend $145 billion this year to accelerate AI infrastructure. At some point, and very soon, Microsoft needs to begin recouping these costs.

We've already seen some movement on this front, with the company announcing a new $99 price tier for its high-end enterprise Copilot, a 65% increase from its previous cost.

The second goal from this transition is to build new competitive models. In a memo to employees, Suleyman wrote that the restructuring would allow him to "focus all my energy on our Superintelligence efforts and be able to deliver world class models for Microsoft over the next 5 years."

To help keep pace with rising AI competition, Microsoft recently partnered with Anthropic to bring Claude Cowork to Microsoft 365, branded as Copilot Cowork. But Microsoft wants to build its own frontier models to use in future AI iterations and differentiate itself from other AI companies.

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Why it's not time to worry about Microsoft (yet)

Microsoft still has one of the most dominant positions in enterprise software. Rather than being ousted from its top position, I think it's more likely that Microsoft will use this restructuring to build better AI models, tighten up the Copilot product experience, and find new ways to generate AI revenue from its massive installed base.

Every major tech giant is trying to figure out what the next phase of AI looks like. Even ChatGPT recently announced it will shut down its popular video generation app, Sora, to focus on its core product.

For long-term investors, Microsoft's recent reorganization looks like a smart refocus on becoming as competitive as possible and an admission that it will need to make more money from AI quickly. If significant AI revenue growth doesn't follow over the next year or so, then it might be time to be concerned. But for now, it's not the time to worry just yet.