Subcontracting GCC Talent: What Federal Primes Should Vet Before Adding an AI “Specialist” to a Bid
If you are a federal prime putting together a bid that needs an AI capability, you are about to add a name to the team that you may not be able to fully vet. The market is full of people who have rebranded as AI specialists in the last eighteen months, and a lot of […]
Read MoreGPT-5.1, GPT-5, and GPT-4o Are Now Running in Your GCC Tenant. Here’s What Actually Changed
On April 2, Microsoft swapped the model stack underneath Microsoft 365 Copilot in every U.S. Government cloud. No downtime, no admin action, no email anyone actually read. If you run a GCC (Government Community Cloud) tenant, your Copilot is running different models today than it was in March, and most admins I talk to have […]
Read MoreAligning Government AI with NIST 800-171 and OMB M-22-09 Zero Trust Without Buying Another Product
The moment a government team decides to deploy an AI agent, a sales cycle starts. Vendors appear with an “AI governance platform,” a compliance dashboard, a model-risk module, all priced per seat per month and all promising to make the auditors happy. Most of the time you do not need any of it. What you […]
Read MoreYour Staff Are Prompting Copilot Like a Search Bar. That’s Why the Answers Are Useless.
Watch a government employee use Microsoft 365 Copilot for the first time and you can usually predict the outcome. They type something like “summarize this,” hit enter, get a flat three-line answer that misses the point, shrug, and go back to doing it by hand. Within a week they have quietly decided the tool is […]
Read MoreYour Agency Paid for Copilot. Almost Nobody Uses It. That’s a Training Problem, and It’s Fixable in a Day.
Somewhere in your tenant right now is a pile of Microsoft 365 Copilot licenses you are paying for every month, and most of them are doing nothing. The seats got provisioned. An email went out announcing the rollout. Leadership expected a productivity jump. Then the usage dashboard flatlined, and the uncomfortable question started circulating: are […]
Read MoreThe GCC Subcontractor Federal Primes Actually Need: M365, Copilot, and Power Platform Delivery That Survives the Boundary
A prime wins a Microsoft 365 modernization task order. The proposal promised Copilot enablement, Power Platform automation, and Purview governance, all inside the agency’s Government Community Cloud. Then the kickoff call lands, somebody opens the tenant, and the commercial-cloud engineer who looked great on the resume hits the first GCC wall by lunch. Half the […]
Read MoreThe Real Copilot Readiness Checklist for GCC: Oversharing, Permission Sprawl, and Label Drift
Microsoft 365 Copilot does not create your data problem. It indexes it, then hands it to anyone with a license and a question. Everything that was quietly overshared for the last decade is now one prompt away from the wrong person. That is the uncomfortable truth under every Copilot rollout, and it is worse in […]
Read MoreFrom Natural Language to Graph API: Letting Non-Scripters Run Tier-3 M365 Admin Safely
Most government IT teams have the same bottleneck, and it is not technology. It is that one or two people know the PowerShell and the Graph API calls for tier-three M365 administration, and everyone else opens a ticket and waits. Assign a license, fix a mailbox permission, provision a shared mailbox, clean up a distribution […]
Read MoreMCP Servers in Government: Giving AI Agents Safe, Policy-Compliant Tooling Without Opening Your Tenant
An AI agent is only as safe as the tools you hand it. Give it broad access and a friendly prompt, and it will do exactly what you were afraid it might. In a government tenant, that is not a theoretical risk. It is the design question you answer before anything reaches production. Most of […]
Read MoreAutomating Public-Records Retention Classification Without Touching the Cloud: Local SLM + Vector Retrieval
Public records retention is the least glamorous problem in government IT and one of the few that can actually end up in court. Every record an agency holds has a statutory clock on it. Classify it wrong and you either destroy something you were legally required to keep, or you hoard sensitive material long past […]
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