In this episode of the m365.fm podcast, Mirko Peters sits down with Microsoft MVP, educator, technical storyteller, and community leader Karinne Diamond Bessette to explore one of the biggest productivity challenges in the modern workplace: information chaos. Between OneNote, Loop, Teams, Copilot, Planner, Whiteboard, Outlook, and SharePoint, employees today have more places than ever to store ideas, tasks, meeting notes, project updates, and collaborative content. The result? Many organizations struggle to decide where information should actually live and how to keep everything organized, searchable, and actionable.

THE EVOLUTION OF MICROSOFT 365 COLLABORATION

Karinne shares her journey from support engineering and operations into the world of enablement, technical storytelling, and Microsoft 365 advocacy. Her experience helping both technical and non-technical users gives her a unique perspective on how collaboration tools should work in real-world environments. Throughout the episode, she repeatedly emphasizes the importance of translating technology into something humans can actually understand and use effectively. One of the central themes in the discussion is the growing complexity of the Microsoft 365 ecosystem. What once started as a productivity suite focused on Word, Excel, and Outlook has evolved into a massive connected collaboration platform with overlapping tools, AI integrations, and constantly changing workflows. Karinne explains that while flexibility is valuable, it also creates a major challenge for users trying to decide where to create notes, how to manage information, and how to avoid duplication.

WHY ONENOTE STILL MATTERS

The conversation dives deeply into the evolution of note-taking itself. Karinne explains how she originally moved from scattered text files on her desktop into OneNote because it allowed her to centralize and search information more effectively. However, she also introduces one of the most memorable quotes of the episode: “OneNote is where notes go to die.” The problem, according to Karinne, is not that OneNote is bad. The issue is that many users capture information inside notebooks but never revisit it, organize it properly, or connect it to actionable workflows. Important ideas often disappear into large personal notebook structures without reminders, visibility, or collaboration.

HOW LOOP IS CHANGING TEAMWORK

This naturally leads into one of the episode’s biggest topics: Microsoft Loop. Karinne explains why Loop has become one of her favorite tools inside the Microsoft ecosystem. She describes Loop as a bridge between email, Teams, tasks, and collaborative content. Rather than creating multiple copies of information across different applications, Loop allows users to maintain a single shared component that stays synchronized everywhere it appears. This creates what she calls a “single source of truth” experience for collaboration. The episode explores several practical use cases where Loop becomes extremely powerful:

• Shared meeting notes
• Collaborative task tracking
• Persistent project updates
• Cross-team coordinationOne of the most interesting insights from the discussion is that many organizations are already using Loop without realizing it. Karinne explains how modern Microsoft Teams meeting notes now automatically generate Loop-powered collaborative pages behind the scenes. Instead of meeting notes disappearing inside endless Teams chats, organizations can now maintain persistent collaborative workspaces connected to tasks, updates, and shared action items.

COPILOT PAGES, NOTEBOOKS & AI CONTEXT

The conversation also dives into Microsoft Copilot Pages and Copilot Notebooks, which Karinne sees as the next evolution of contextual AI collaboration. These tools allow organizations to gather multiple information sources into centralized workspaces that can then ground AI responses against a specific project context. Karinne shares a practical example from a large event project where she combined:

• Emails
• Teams messages
• Planning calls
• Loop pagesinto one centralized notebook. She was then able to ask Copilot to generate summaries, identify action items, and surface the most relevant information for her specific responsibilities during the event. Tasks that previously would have required hours of manual review were completed in minutes.

THE FUTURE OF ENTERPRISE SEARCH

Another major theme throughout the episode is enterprise search and how AI is fundamentally changing the way organizations retrieve information. Karinne explains that traditional folder structures and file organization are becoming less important because Copilot increasingly understands context, relationships, and semantic meaning rather than relying purely on filenames or locations. She shares an example where she could not manually locate an old PowerPoint presentation but was able to ask Copilot about a presentation tied to a specific event date — and...