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New Microsoft 365 companion apps arrive on the Windows 11 taskbar

Windows 11 users on Microsoft 365 are getting new taskbar companion apps that provide quick access to files, contacts, and calendars for faster daily workflows.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Aug 13, 2025, 1:19 PM EDT
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Microsoft 365 companions showing the People companion and File Search companion with contact availability and recent file activity on Windows 11 taskbar.
Image: Microsoft
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Microsoft quietly—then not-so-quietly—started sliding a set of tiny Office tools into the Windows 11 taskbar this month. If you’re on a business Microsoft 365 plan and use Windows 11, you may already have seen three new “companion” apps appear: People, File Search, and Calendar. They’re low-friction, always-on mini-apps that live in the taskbar, launch at startup, and promise to shave a few context switches off your day.

What these little apps do

Think of the companions as minimal, task-focused helpers — not full Office clients, but fast entry points:

  • People: a quick org-chart and directory lookup that pulls from your Microsoft 365 directory. You can look up colleagues by name, title, department or skills; see reporting lines and presence; and kick off a Teams chat, call, or email without opening Teams or Outlook. This is the one to use when you need to figure out who reports to whom five minutes before a meeting.
  • File Search: a cross-tenant file find box for OneDrive, SharePoint, Teams and Outlook attachments. Search by file name, author or keywords, preview results inline, then open or share the file — all without launching a heavy client. For people who live off quick lookups (and who doesn’t), this can replace the mini-drill-downs to Teams or SharePoint.
  • Calendar: a shrunken calendar view with upcoming events, an appointment search, and one-click meeting join. It’s meant for glanceable scheduling and fast joining; it’s not a full Outlook replacement.

Those descriptions read simple because that’s the intent: these are micro-apps for micro-tasks. Microsoft says they’re built to be lightweight and to reduce the friction of hopping between windows during a busy workday.

Where these came from

Microsoft first showed these taskbar experiences at Ignite last year and ran them through Insider betas in recent months. The companion apps have been publicly available in the Microsoft 365 Insider Program and preview channels before today’s broader business rollout. In short, this wasn’t sprung on users overnight — it’s been in active testing and refinement.

Starting in August 2025, Microsoft has begun deploying the companions to eligible business users who have Microsoft 365 desktop apps on Windows 11. By default, the apps install automatically and they also default to launching at startup — which is exactly the thing that will delight productivity fans and frustrate privacy-conscious or tight-IT shops. Microsoft provides admin controls: IT administrators can prevent automatic installation via the Microsoft 365 Apps admin center, and individual users can stop the apps from auto-launching after they’re installed. Microsoft’s documentation walks through the opt-out and deployment steps.

That nuance is important. Uninstalling or preventing future installs is different from removing the apps from devices where they’ve already been pushed; some admin controls stop future installs but won’t retroactively yank what’s already on endpoints. Expect a mix of reactions in IT teams — some will pin these tools for users, others will block them for noise control.

Why Microsoft is doing this

Microsoft has spent the last few years trying to make Office services feel more ambient and easier to reach: Copilot in Windows, tighter Teams integration, loop components, and now these taskbar companions. Two ideas are at play:

  1. Reduce context switching — the smaller the surface area for a task, the less you need to leave your workflow. A five-second file preview from the taskbar beats opening Teams, searching, waiting for the UI to load, and then realizing it’s the wrong file.
  2. Platform stickiness — by embedding Office functions into the operating system chrome, Microsoft increases the chance people stay inside the Microsoft 365 ecosystem for small tasks instead of reaching for alternatives.

This also signals a design philosophy shift: the taskbar is no longer just for launching heavy apps; it’s becoming a place for “micro-experiences” that surface the exact piece of data you need.

The tradeoffs — speed vs. surface area

Not everyone will love auto-installed taskbar helpers. Privacy and bloat arguments will pop up: anything that runs at startup and sits in the taskbar is a candidate for annoyance. Admins will need to balance convenience against support overhead and user preference. There’s also the real question of duplication — many organizations already use endpoint search tools, browser bookmarks, or pinned Teams channels for the same quick tasks. Will the companions meaningfully speed work, or simply add another place to click?

These companions arrive at a moment when Microsoft is experimenting more aggressively with ambient productivity — from Copilot overlays to talk of “agentic” taskbar assistants that could proactively suggest actions. The companions feel like a pragmatic middle step: small, useful, and low risk compared with larger AI interventions. Whether they become indispensable will depend on how cleanly they integrate with existing workflows and how politely they behave on machines already crowded with software.

If you’re an office worker who spends a lot of time jumping between Teams, SharePoint, and Outlook, the new People and File Search companions could shave off dozens of tiny interruptions a week. If you’re an IT admin or someone who hates apps that auto-start, you’ll want to read Microsoft’s deployment docs and adjust your tenant settings accordingly. Either way, these tiny apps are a clear sign Microsoft wants the taskbar to be more helpful than just decorative.


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