On 9 March, Microsoft announced its biggest licensing expansion in more than a decade: Microsoft 365 E7, officially the Frontier Suite. Available from 1 May 2026, at 99 dollars per user per month. This is not a regular upgrade. It is Microsoft's answer to the question every CIO is wrestling with today: how do I govern AI agents at enterprise scale?
E7 bundles four components into one suite: Microsoft 365 E5 as the foundation, Microsoft 365 Copilot, the Entra Suite for identity management, and Agent 365, the new control plane for AI agents. The underlying intelligence layer is called Work IQ and is designed to give Copilot and all agents a contextual understanding of how your organisation operates.
Microsoft calls it 'human-led, agent-operated'. Humans set the intent, agents execute. And Agent 365 ensures those agents get governance, identity and auditability, just like human employees.
So much for the official message. Time to look at the reality on the ground.
What E7 solves, and what it does not
The Frontier Suite addresses a real problem. Today, most organisations are already running Copilot pilots, custom GPTs, Power Platform agents and, here and there, a shadow AI tool that IT never approved. Nobody has a complete view. Which agent has access to which data? What is that agent doing with sensitive information? Agent 365 gives you that control back, and that is a genuine win.
But agents are not an end in themselves. They are only as useful as the content they work with. And that is where the gap sits.
Copilot and agents look at SharePoint, OneDrive, Teams and email. In most SMEs and larger organisations, that is a digital attic. Duplicates, outdated versions, documents without metadata, folders belonging to people who left three years ago. Work IQ learns from signals. But if your signals are noise, the intelligence layer learns noise.
Microsoft does not solve that. Nor should they. E7 is about agent governance, not content governance.
Where M-Files comes in
M-Files approaches information fundamentally differently. Not starting from folders, but from metadata. Every document has a meaning, an owner, a lifecycle and an access rights model that travels with the content itself. That sounds abstract, until you combine it with Copilot.
An agent working on an M-Files vault does not receive a dump of files. It receives structured, classified, rights-protected objects. The agent knows whether a document is a proposal, a contract, a policy or a working draft. It knows which version is the right one. It knows who is allowed to see it.
Concretely, this means:
- Copilot answers become more accurate, because the source itself is accurate
- Sensitive documents stay sensitive, even when an agent picks them up, because the rights travel with them
- Lifecycle management happens automatically, so outdated content disappears from the scope agents operate on
- Audit trails exist at the document level, not just at the agent level
E7 without a properly ordered content layer is a Ferrari on cheap tyres. The engine is excellent, but the grip is missing.
What does this mean for BeNeLux organisations?
For Belgian, Dutch and Luxembourg organisations considering a migration to E7, the arithmetic is clear. You are investing heavily on a per-user basis. To get ROI out of that, your content has to be AI-ready. That is not a licensing question, that is an information architecture question.
Our experience with accounting firms, consultancies and industrial companies: the bottleneck is never in the AI tools themselves. The bottleneck sits in how content is managed. Without metadata, classification and governance at the document level, Copilot remains a more expensive version of Bing.
The right combination
Microsoft 365 E7 and M-Files are not competitors. They solve different problems, at different layers of the stack. E7 governs the agents and their identities. M-Files governs the content and its context. Together, they deliver a governance story that actually holds up in practice.
Anyone thinking about E7 today would be wise to think simultaneously about the state of their content. Before you pay 99 dollars per user, you want to be sure that Copilot and Agent 365 will actually have something meaningful to do.
The Frontier Suite is not a destination. It is a starting point. And on every departure, your luggage matters.