Microsoft Kills Viva Topics to Focus on Copilot

Viva Topics Retirement Propelled by More Lucrative Copilot Opportunity

In a surprise announcement posted in Microsoft 365 message center notification MC718486, Microsoft said that they will retire Viva Topics on February 22, 2025 and will stop new feature development as of February 22, 2024. Originating as part of Project Cortex, Microsoft launched Viva Topics as one of the four modules in its new Viva employee experience platform in February 2021. Support documentation covering the retirement is available online as is a FAQ.

The idea behind Viva Topics is that organizations could leverage their investment in SharePoint Online by creating curated knowledge network about topics important to the business. Knowledge editors would maintain the topics and link them to sources. Users could consume the information in the knowledge network by inserting topics into the natural flow of communications created in Outlook messages, Teams chats and channel conversations (Figure 1), or SharePoint documents. The latest development was to expose topics in the Microsoft 365 user profile card.

Viva Topics in a Teams channel conversation.

Viva Topics retirement
Figure 1: Viva Topics in a Teams channel conversation

There’s some great technology in Viva Topics. Alas, great technology doesn’t always survive in the acid test of the market. Some Microsoft 365 tenants use Topics, but I don’t see any evidence of a major groundswell of projects. The level of discussion about Topics is low in online forums and it’s not a subject for sessions submitted to major Microsoft 365 conferences. Although hardly a test that could be stood over, it is undeniable that potential speakers submit sessions for technology that interests them or that they work on. I cannot recall seeing a submission for a Viva Topics session in the last year.

Knowledge Management is Hard

Knowledge management is hard. Anyone who set up and managed a knowledge network for Viva Topics will appreciate that the AI-powered harvesting of topics from content stored in SharePoint Online can generate hundreds or thousands of topics to curate, refine, and publish, all of which takes time. The work of the knowledge managers might not be appreciated by end users, or even recognized if end users don’t receive education about how to use Topics.

Even though they announced lightweight management for Topics through Viva Engage in July 2023 and Copilot in Viva Topics in April 2023, the benefit of hindsight shows that Microsoft’s heart had been snatched by Copilot and the clarion call to development groups to create Copilot-branded experiences.

Copilot Wins the Game and Forces the Viva Topics Retirement

Apart from being swept along by the Copilot wave, I think hard business logic is a major driving factor behind Microsoft’s decision to retire Viva Topics. Copilot for Microsoft 365 brings in $30/user/month plus the opportunity to upsell customers to more expensive Office 365 or Microsoft 365 licenses. Microsoft’s pricing for Viva Topics varied over the years. According to Copilot, a Viva Topics license brings in $4/user/month (Figure 2).

Copilot figures out the cost of Viva Topics licenses.
Figure 2: Copilot figures out the cost of Viva Topics licenses

Even when included in the Viva Communications and Community license, Topics cannot contribute anywhere close to the revenue that Copilot will likely deliver over the next five years. In addition, Viva Topics is usually a much harder project to sell, and its implementation lacks the excitement and glamor currently associated with Copilot. I mean, topic refinement compared to AI-generated email and documents?

Looking at the situation through the business lens, it makes absolute sense for Microsoft to retire Viva Topics and realign the engineering resources from that program to work on other AI-related projects, such as the “new AI-powered knowledge management experiences” promised in the announcement.

Third Time Lucky

Microsoft’s record in knowledge management is not stellar. The next-generation knowledge portals promised at Ignite 2015 vanished as soon as the attendees left Chicago and its infamous baloney conference lunches behind. Now Viva Topics is being retired. Microsoft has put all its knowledge management eggs in the Copilot basket. Let’s hope that the next round of knowledge applications powered by Copilot demonstrate once again that Microsoft has the habit of getting things right third time around.


Insight like this doesn’t come easily. You’ve got to know the technology and understand how to look behind the scenes to understand why the Viva Topics retirement happened. Benefit from the knowledge and experience of the Office 365 for IT Pros team by subscribing to the best eBook covering the Microsoft 365 ecosystem.

2 Replies to “Microsoft Kills Viva Topics to Focus on Copilot”

    1. Now that you mention it, I recall that Viva Topics session at ESPC. I should have gone.

      But I hold to the point that I don’t see Viva Topics sessions submitted to conferences where I am involved with the schedule. But I see a ton of Copilot sessions because everyone wants to talk about it (and largely repeat what others say)

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