The short version: Google is rolling out a feature that lets you connect your Google Business Profile directly to Gemini, giving the AI assistant access to your reviews, customer questions, and performance data with one tap. Paired with a new “Business Notebooks” workspace, Gemini can now analyze how your business is actually doing, draft review responses in your voice, and flag things like unanswered questions or missing holiday hours before they cost you a customer. It’s rolling out globally this month, excluding the EEA and UK for now, and it’s included in the Gemini app at no extra charge.
What is Gemini’s new Google Business Profile connection?
Most small business owners already have a Google Business Profile. It’s the listing that shows your hours, address, reviews, and photos when someone searches your name. Until now, it sat there as a static asset you occasionally logged into to answer a review or update your hours.
Google’s update, detailed on the company’s own blog, lets you securely link that profile to the Gemini app in a single step. Once connected, Gemini can pull in search impressions, direction requests, call volume, and customer engagement, then answer plain questions like “how did my business do this month?” with an actual analysis instead of a generic explainer on marketing metrics.
It can also draft responses to customer reviews in your brand’s voice, and help you spot and fill gaps in your listing, whether that’s missing seasonal hours or an out-of-date service list.
What do Gemini’s Business Notebooks actually do?
The second half of the update is a feature called Business Notebooks, a dedicated workspace inside Gemini that keeps your chats, your Business Profile, and your website content in one place instead of scattered across separate sessions.
The practical upside is that Gemini stops starting from zero every time you open it. Instead of re-explaining your business each session, it proactively surfaces things that need attention: an unanswered customer question sitting in your reviews, holiday hours you forgot to set, a gap between what your website says and what your profile shows. It also helps put together promotional campaigns and track how they perform, using the same business context.
Why this matters more than the headline suggests
Here’s the part that’s easy to miss. The biggest reason small business owners abandon AI tools isn’t that the tools are bad. It’s the setup tax. Every new AI session requires re-explaining your business, your brand voice, your customers, your services, before you get anything useful back. For an owner running a business solo or with a skeleton crew, that tax is often not worth paying twice.
Google didn’t have to build a new database to fix this. It just pointed Gemini at data most owners are already maintaining for an entirely different reason: their public listing. That’s the non-obvious insight here. The context problem that’s kept AI adoption shallow among the least technical business owners isn’t a technology gap, it’s a plumbing gap, and plumbing gaps are exactly the kind of thing a company that already owns both the AI and the business directory can quietly close.
It also lowers the stakes of getting started. You’re not uploading anything new or building a knowledge base from scratch. You’re connecting a listing you already update, and letting the assistant read what’s already public.
How do you turn this on for your business?
The feature lives inside the Gemini app and rolls out through July. If you don’t see the connection option yet, check back over the coming weeks, since Google is rolling this out in stages. When it appears:
- Open the Gemini app and look for the option to connect your Google Business Profile.
- Grant the connection, then ask a direct question, such as “how did my business perform this month” or “draft a response to my most recent review.”
- Open a Business Notebook and let it sit for a few days before judging it. The proactive alerts (unanswered questions, hour gaps) need a little time to surface.
Two caveats worth knowing before you rely on this for anything customer-facing. First, it isn’t available yet in the EEA or UK, so if you operate there, this is still on the horizon rather than in hand. Second, Google hasn’t published pricing details for any premium tier of this feature beyond noting that “special Workspace and Gemini offers” are coming. Treat what’s live today as the baseline, and confirm before assuming a paid tier adds capability you’re expecting.
One more thing worth double-checking yourself: any drafted review response is a draft. Read it before it goes out. Gemini is good at matching tone, not at knowing which customer relationships need a more careful hand than a template allows.
This isn’t Google’s first swing at making Gemini more useful for owners who aren’t technical. It follows Gemini’s real-time call translation across 70+ languages, another feature built to remove a specific, felt friction rather than add a new one. And it lands at a moment when most small business owners already use AI daily but few feel confident it’s paying off, which is exactly the gap a lower-friction, already-populated context is meant to close. If you’re still weighing whether any of this earns its keep, it’s worth reading alongside what the enterprise AI spending reckoning has to teach small businesses about ROI before you scale up usage.
For the daily rundown of what’s actually worth your attention in AI, browse our full AI coverage.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a paid Google Workspace plan to use this?
No. The Google Business Profile connection and Business Notebooks are rolling out inside the free Gemini app. Google has mentioned additional Workspace and Gemini offers are coming, but hasn’t published pricing or said they’re required for these two features.
Is this available outside the United States?
It’s rolling out globally this month, with one notable exception: it’s currently excluded in the EEA and UK. If you operate in either region, expect a delay before this reaches you.
What data can Gemini actually see once I connect my profile?
Based on Google’s description, it can access your customer reviews, the questions customers post on your listing, and performance data such as search impressions, direction requests, and call engagement. It draws on your website content too when you’re working inside a Business Notebook.
Should I let Gemini post review responses automatically?
Treat every drafted response as exactly that, a draft. It’s a legitimate time-saver for getting a first pass written in your voice, but a human should still read it before it goes live, especially for anything more complicated than a routine thank-you.
If you’ve felt the setup tax of re-explaining your business to an AI tool every time you open it, this is one of the first mainstream fixes for that specific friction. Worth trying, or worth staying skeptical of? We’d genuinely like to hear which side you land on.
