Wed. Apr 15th, 2026

How to build your own AI agents with Google Workspace Studio

The topic of How to build your own AI agents with Google Workspace Studio is currently the subject of lively debate — readers and analysts are keeping a close eye on developments.

This is taking place in a dynamic environment: companies’ decisions and competitors’ reactions can quickly change the picture.

The great hope for AI agents is that they will automate many of the repetitive tasks office workers perform, such as writing and emailing weekly project updates. These tools combine rules-based automation with generative AI models to perform a series of tasks that make up a workflow.

In this vein, Google late last year announced Workspace Studio, a no-code application that lets non-programmers choose from prebuilt steps or use natural language descriptions to create and customize agents that automate workflows in Google Workspace. These “flows” integrate with Workspace apps including Gmail, Docs, Sheets, Drive, Calendar, Chat, Forms, and Tasks, and also (in limited preview) some third-party apps such as Asana, Mailchimp, and Salesforce. Google’s genAI assistant, Gemini, helps you create and execute flows.

Who can use Workspace Studio: Announced in December 2025, Workspace Studio is now rolling out to Google Workspace business, enterprise, and education customers. (Your administrator may need to enable access to Gemini.) It’s also available to users with Google AI Pro for Education and Google AI Ultra for Business accounts.

This quick guide will show you how to navigate Google Workspace Studio, how to set up a flow, and how to manage your flows.

In Google’s parlance, a flow is a series of steps that automatically run in the background of your Google Workspace environment. The flow waits for a “starter” event to happen, and when it does, one or more actions is triggered in response. Some examples:

In the background, Gemini is used to “reason” through the execution of a flow, analyzing your documents or other content that the flow references, to help ensure that the actions taken by the flow go through successfully.

A flow can also be set on a schedule or in response to an event to enter a prompt into Gemini, or to execute a Gem. (Gems are customized AI agents trained on specific topics. See our guide to Gemini Gems for details about using them.) for example, you could create a flow that runs every Friday and prompts Gemini to write and send an email summarizing the latest data in a Google Sheet that you and your co-workers update frequently.

When you open the Workspace Studio home page (also known as the Discover page), you’re greeted with a text entry box for Gemini. You can type a prompt inside it describing the actions (a.k.a. “steps”) that you want a flow to take when something happens (a “starter” event or schedule).

Three suggested flow templates appear below the Gemini text entry box. (In the screenshot below, the templates are Label emails with action items, Streamline my follow-up, and Catch up on news.) You can click a template to activate it.

On the Workspace Studio home page, you can type in a prompt for Gemini to create a flow, select a flow template, or click the big + sign to start a new flow.

Below these three suggested flows, there are even more flow templates. They’re organized under categories describing what they’re for, such as “Email boosters,” “Better meetings,” and “Tasks and action items.”

Discover: This is the default home page with the Gemini text entry box and templates below it. If you’re in another page of the Workspace Studio, such as the “New flow” page above, clicking this takes you back home.

My flows: This opens a page that lists the flows you’ve created. You can manage your flows: delete, edit, rename, or share them with others. This page also has a tab you can click to view an activity log that lists which flows are active, when they were executed, what steps they took, and if their execution was successful or not.

On the home page, you can use Gemini or a template to start a new flow. But it helps to learn by using the flow builder tool first. This way, you’ll understand more clearly how flows work. (Even if you use Gemini or a template, you’ll be taken to the flow builder interface, because you must review and test the flow before you can activate it.)

On the left toolbar, click the + symbol. The flow builder tool will open in the main window to the right.

Workspace Studio’s tool builder, with the flow in the main window and suggested “starters” to the right.

First, give your new flow a name. Toward the upper left, click Untitled flow and type in a name for your flow.

Below the flow name, click Choose a starter. Then, in the pane along the right, select an event that will trigger the flow to take action. Once you’ve selected a starter event, the pane on the right may show additional parameters to fill in. Examples:

Once you’ve selected a starter event for the flow, click Choose a step in the main window.

In the right pane, there are several actions (steps) that you can select from. They’re presented under categories such as “AI skills,” “Tools,” and individual Workspace apps (Gmail, Chat, Sheets, etc.) and can include anything from adding a label to a Gmail message to sending Gemini a prompt. There are also steps that can integrate with your accounts on Asana, QuickBooks, and Salesforce.

for example: If a document is added to a specified folder in your Google Drive (the starter), the flow can trigger Gemini to generate a summary of the document’s content (the step).

You can add more actions that your flow will execute when the starter event happens. In the main pane, and below the first step of your flow, click + Add step, then select a second step from the right pane that the flow will take after it executes the first step. The maximum number of steps that you can add to a flow is 20.

You can add a substep to a step (click Add substep in the main pane); indeed, certain steps require you to do so. A regular step is a main, sequential action in the overall flow, executed one after another. A substep is subordinate; it is only executed after and as a result of its parent step. for example, a step could identify a document, with its substep sending the document to a specific folder. (In the screenshot above, Step 4 is a substep of Step 3.)

You may also opt (or be required) to add a variable for a step (by clicking the + Variables button in the right pane). for example, a variable could be a time or date that you want the action to be executed, or text that you select, such as the title for a document that you want an action to generate.

There are currently about a dozen starters and two dozen steps to choose from in Workspace Studio. See Google’s comprehensive list of Workspace Studio starters and steps for descriptions, examples, and configuration details for each one.

When you’re finished building your flow, click the Test run button at the bottom of the main pane.

The right pane guides you through what will happen: When you click the Start button in this pane, your flow will be executed. Note that the test run takes real actions, such as changing a document or setting up a meeting. Google recommends temporarily setting up the flow with a test document or a meeting where you’re the only invitee. If the test run works, you can go back and swap in the real document or meeting before deploying the flow.

If the test run is successful (or not), you’ll see a notice at the bottom of the right pane. If the test isn’t successful, you’ll be advised on what fixes you can make to the steps in your flow.

After you’ve confirmed that your new flow will work according to the data the test run and made any final adjustments, click the Turn on button at the bottom of the main pane.

Note: You can create a maximum of 100 flows, and other limits apply, such as how many times your flows can run each day.

Now that you know how flows work, check out the Workspace Studio templates to see if any fit your workflows. Click Discover in the left toolbar to return to the Workspace Studio home page, scroll down to see all the available templates, then click on a template. The flow builder tool opens with all the steps already in place.

A flow template in the flow builder tool. You set parameters such as start date and scheduling, and you can customize it further if you wish.

Click on each step (including the Starter step), configuring each one for your needs, such as selecting a specific file to take action on. You can also add, delete, or reorder steps in the flow using the three-dot (“More”) icon next to a step.

The fastest way to build a flow is to have Gemini do it. On the Workspace Studio home page, type a description of the flow you want into the text box and click the Create button.

The possibilities for prompting Gemini to build a flow are very broad. So it helps if you’re familiar with the Google Workspace apps that flows can interact with and have the imagination and savvy for experimenting with writing AI prompts.

Once you’ve clicked Create, the generated flow opens in the flow builder tool, where you can review and edit it if needed.

On the toolbar along the left, click the My flows icon. A list of your flows will open to the right in the main window.

Click the three-dot icon to the right of a flow’s name. This will open a menu with selections for you to manage the flow: Edit, Make a copy, Activity, Turn off, Delete.

Clicking the Activity tab on the “My flows” page takes you to a page that lists the activities for all your flows.

To share a flow with others in your organization, select it in the list of flows, then click Get a link to copy at the top of the page. Change the permission to Anyone in your organization with the link can make a copy, then click Copy link. You can share the link with co-workers via email or in Chat.

In Gmail and Google Chat, you can open a sidebar that helps you manage your flows. Look to the upper-right corner of the Workspace app for the Studio icon — it’s between the Settings gear icon and Ask Gemini nova star. Click this and the Studio sidebar will open along the right. It has three tabs in it:

Discover: Like the Workspace Studio home page, this tab presents suggested flows that are ready for you to activate.

When you add a new flow by selecting a template in the Discover tab, you’ll be taken to the flow builder tool in the Workspace Studio app. You have to customize and test run it from here before you can activate it.

My flows: This lists your flows. You can delete, edit, rename, or share them from this tab.

Activity: This tab shows the activity log of your flows — when they went into action and the steps that they took.

Learn by example: Select a flow template and customize it in the tool builder. This will help you learn how a flow works.

Reference files: Use the @ to directly reference a file in your Google Drive when you’re customizing a step in the flow builder tool or writing a Gemini prompt to generate a flow.

Experiment: Don’t be afraid to experiment with your prompts to Gemini. Describe the flow you want, using everyday language. Remember, your prompt should answer what, when, and where.

Review flow activity: After a flow is executed, review its activity log to understand how it played out its steps.

Why it matters

News like this often changes audience expectations and competitors’ plans.

When one player makes a move, others usually react — it is worth reading the event in context.

What to look out for next

The full picture will become clear in time, but the headline already shows the dynamics of the industry.

Further statements and user reactions will add to the story.

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