
~12 min read | Published March 19, 2026
Quick answer: There is no single winner. Each of these tools is genuinely good at something different. Claude Cowork is the right choice for desktop-heavy, file-based work with third-party apps. Microsoft Copilot Cowork wins if your life is already inside Outlook, Teams, and Excel. Manus and Perplexity Computer take over when the task requires pulling from hundreds of sources across the web without you sitting there.
Why this matters: AI agents are no longer a future concept. They are running in production for thousands of people right now. For teams on Microsoft 365 and Power Platform, the real question is how you delegate work without creating new governance gaps, shadow tools, or support debt. The right pick saves hours and keeps proving value. The wrong pick burns time in exceptions and rework.
For you if: You fit one of these audiences we write for: a Power Platform or Microsoft 365 administration lead who needs security, visibility, and sane enablement; an enterprise or mid-market transformation team that wants ethical, low-risk pilots with measurable ROI; a citizen developer or Power Platform specialist juggling delivery, governance, and career growth; or a developer or tech professional who wants credible, hands-on patterns without buzzword soup.
Four tools. Four very different answers to the same question: how do you get an AI to do actual work for you instead of just answering questions?
Claude Cowork runs on your desktop and digs into your files. Microsoft Copilot Cowork lives inside your Microsoft 365 apps and knows your calendar before you finish asking. Manus spins up a cloud-based AI team and hands you a finished research report while you go live your life. Perplexity Computer does something similar but coordinates 19 different AI models to handle each part of a job with the right tool.
None of these are gimmicks. All four are in production now. And if you pick the wrong one for how you actually work, you will spend more time managing the tool than the work you were trying to get done.
Here is how they actually compare, including what matters if you own a platform, run a program, or ship automations inside a governed organization.
Anthropic's desktop agent. Runs on your computer. Connects to your local files, your browser, and third-party apps via Connectors. High flexibility. Requires your computer to stay on.
Microsoft's agentic layer inside Microsoft 365. Deeply embedded in Outlook, Teams, Excel, Word, and SharePoint. Cloud-based. Built for organizations already committed to the Microsoft stack.
A cloud agent that runs long, parallel research tasks in the background. You assign the job, Manus deploys multiple agents across the web, and you come back to a finished output. No machine required to stay on.
A cloud agent that coordinates 19 different AI models, routing each subtask to the best-fit model. Built for research-heavy, multi-stage jobs. Priced at $200/month for Perplexity Max subscribers.
If you are skimming, match your day job to the block below. The rest of the article fills in the trade-offs behind each bullet.
Your world is DLP, licensing, audit evidence, and visibility. Copilot Cowork stays inside the Microsoft contracting and admin story your stakeholders already expect. Consumer-style cloud agents are a second line of risk: new vendor, new data path, harder to inventory next to shadow Power Platform usage.
You need quick wins that scale, executive-ready clarity, and human-first change. Tie pilots to time saved and error reduction the same way you would for automation or low-code adoption. Prove ROI before you widen access.
You build flows and apps, support users, and live inside IT policy. Copilot makes sense when your work is already in Microsoft 365. Claude Cowork helps when the business swears by Slack, local folders, or tools outside the tenant, but you still need to clear connectors and avoid production data in unapproved apps.
You want something you can script, extend, and prove. Claude Cowork plus MCP is the strongest lever if you are wiring agents to APIs and internal tools. Copilot is strongest when your integration surface is Microsoft 365 and you want fewer moving parts.
This table focuses on the real differentiators. Not the marketing bullets. The things that actually matter when you sit down to get work done.
| What matters to you | Claude Cowork | Copilot Cowork | Manus | Perplexity Computer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Where it runs | Your local desktop | Microsoft cloud (M365 apps) | Manus cloud | Perplexity cloud |
| Your computer must stay on | Yes Limit | No | No | No |
| Works on your local files | Yes Strength | SharePoint / OneDrive only | Upload required | Upload required |
| Third-party app support | Yes (Slack, Gmail, Sentry, and more via MCP Connectors) Strength | Microsoft 365 ecosystem primarily | Web-based integrations | API integrations, 19-model routing |
| Enterprise / governance fit (typical) | Requires clear policy: desktop agent, local data, non-Microsoft connectors; IT and security should sign off | Aligns with Microsoft 365 admin, compliance, and licensing model most enterprises already run Strength | Separate vendor and terms; legal and security review before regulated or confidential data | Separate vendor, high-tier pricing; legal and security review before regulated or confidential data |
| Outlook and Teams integration | Via third-party connectors | Native, deeply embedded Strength | Limited | Limited |
| Excel and Word integration | Via local file access | Native agents inside the apps Strength | Upload and process | Upload and process |
| Large-scale web research | Sequential browsing | Limited | Parallel agents across 100+ sources Strength | Multi-model orchestration across web Strength |
| Assign tasks from your phone | Yes, via Dispatch (research preview) | Yes, via Teams mobile | Yes | Yes |
| Runs while you sleep | Only if your computer stays on and awake | Yes (cloud-based) | Yes Strength | Yes Strength |
| Entry price point | $20/month (Pro) or $100/month (Max) | $30/user/month (Microsoft 365 Copilot) | Varies by tier (Pro plan available) | $200/month (Perplexity Max) |
| AI model used | Claude only (Anthropic) | Microsoft/OpenAI models | Manus proprietary stack | 19 models routed by task type |
| Best single sentence | Desktop work, your files, your apps | Microsoft ecosystem, out of the box | Cloud research, no machine required | Complex jobs routed to the best AI |
This is the comparison that comes up most often, and it deserves a slower look because both tools are genuinely good. They just serve different people.
Claude Cowork connects to a broad range of third-party apps through Anthropic's MCP Connectors. Slack, Gmail, Sentry, GitHub, Notion, and more. If your workflow spans tools that are not made by Microsoft, Claude can reach into them. That is not something Copilot does out of the box.
Claude also works directly with your local files. If you have a folder full of CSVs, PDFs, or project notes sitting on your hard drive, Claude can read them without you uploading anything or routing them through a cloud sync first. For people doing file-heavy project work, contract review, or local data analysis, this matters a lot.
The flexibility extends to how you build workflows. You can combine Claude with external tools through the Model Context Protocol (MCP), which means developers and technically inclined users can wire Claude into almost anything. The ceiling on what you can automate is much higher.
If your day runs through Outlook and Teams, Microsoft Copilot is not just good at those apps. It was built for them from the ground up.
Copilot's Wave 3 agentic features (rolling out from March 2026) include calendar agents that accept and decline meetings based on your preferences, email agents that draft messages using context from your past conversations and relationships, and embedded agents inside Word, Excel, and PowerPoint that create and update documents directly. According to Microsoft's own announcement, these features are live in Outlook across Windows, web, and mobile starting March 9, 2026.
No connector setup. No pairing. It already knows your calendar, your email history, and your working hours. For an organization that runs on Microsoft 365, that is not a small thing. It is the entire workday.
The tradeoff is scope. Copilot works extremely well inside the Microsoft ecosystem and becomes significantly less useful the moment you step outside it. If your stack includes tools that Microsoft does not own, you will hit walls.
Claude Cowork gives you a powerful, flexible agent you can point at almost anything, including files on your desktop, apps Microsoft does not make, and custom workflows you build yourself. Copilot Cowork gives you a deeply embedded assistant that already understands your Outlook, your Teams meetings, and your Excel sheets without you doing any setup. If you spend your day in Microsoft apps, Copilot requires almost no friction to start. If you do not, it becomes limiting fast.
This distinction shapes everything else about how these tools fit into real life.
For tasks that live on your hard drive, Claude Cowork is fast. It reads your files without a network hop. A summary of 50 PDFs in a local folder takes seconds to start, not the time it would take to upload them first.
For tasks that require pulling from the open web, cloud agents have the structural advantage. Manus's Wide Research feature (launched early 2026) deploys hundreds of independent agents simultaneously, each with its own browser, VM, and internet access. According to Manus's own documentation, this lets it research 250 companies, 100 product models, or a full competitive landscape in roughly the same time it takes a single-agent system to process ten. Sequential web browsing simply cannot compete with that at scale.
The most honest comparison here is simple. With Claude Cowork, you assign a task and your computer runs it. If you close your laptop, the task stops. With Manus or Perplexity Computer, you assign a task and it runs whether you are at your desk, in a meeting, on a flight, or asleep.
That is not a small difference for longer jobs. A competitive research report, a batch analysis of 200 vendors, a content audit of a full website directory. These are tasks that might run for hours. Cloud execution means you genuinely do not have to babysit them. You come back to a finished output.
Cloud agents do not have access to your local files unless you give it to them explicitly. If your work lives in a folder on your desktop, you need to upload it, sync it to a cloud storage service, or use a local agent like Claude Cowork. For privacy-sensitive documents, that upload step is not trivial. Know where your data goes before you route it through a third-party cloud.
Treat AI agents like any new connector or automation path. Where do prompts and files go? Can you log and review usage? Does the tool sit under existing Microsoft agreements or introduce another supplier to onboard and monitor? Copilot Cowork is the path of least resistance when your organization already standardized on Microsoft 365 and your success metric is enablement without surprise shadow IT. Claude Cowork can still be right for teams that need desktop and non-Microsoft reach, but it belongs in a written policy: who may use it, on what class of data, and how support and offboarding work.
Skip the feature lists. Here is the honest decision framework based on how you actually work.
Every one of these tools is solving the same underlying problem: you have more work that requires your attention than hours in a day to give it. The tools are different because the types of work people need delegated are different.
Picking the right one is not about which AI is smartest. It is about where your actual friction is and whether your organization can support the tool without new risk. If you are drowning in email and calendar management, Copilot is closer to your pain. If you are stuck doing research that takes you three days and could be done in three hours with the right tool, Manus or Perplexity Computer is the one to try once data policy allows it. If your work is spread across local files and a mix of apps, Claude Cowork is the agent that can actually reach all of it, provided admins get a say before it touches sensitive data.
The version of your workday where this stuff is running in the background while you focus on the decisions only you can make is not far off. These tools are not perfect yet. But the gap between where they are and where they need to be is closing fast. Start with the one that fits how you already work, and you will feel that difference sooner than you think.
Part of the Quick Reference Kit from elijah.ai. Elijah R. Young helps organizations understand and work with AI and automation in plain English. Since 2018, he has helped teams build automation that sticks. Get in touch for strategy and delivery support.