Google moves toward a more unified Gemini business platform

Google is testing a new Skills Marketplace for Gemini Business, a sign that the company is continuing to fold more tools into a single enterprise AI experience. The feature appears in a new tab that is loading an interface tied to Android Studio, suggesting Google is experimenting with a broader workspace inside Gemini Business rather than keeping products separate.

The development fits into a larger consolidation effort around Gemini Enterprise. Google has been bringing different capabilities under one roof, and the emerging Skills Marketplace looks like another step in that direction. Rather than forcing users to move between multiple standalone services, the company appears to be building a hub where business customers can access specialized functions from one place.

One part of the test points to Android development. A separate page embedded in Gemini Business references Android Studio, and the current setup suggests that users may eventually be able to open Android Studio from within an enterprise-focused Gemini environment. That would extend Google’s existing push to connect AI tools with app-building workflows.

There is already some precedent for this approach. Google’s AI Studio can generate native Android apps from simple text prompts and includes a browser-based emulator. The new Gemini Business interface seems to be following a similar philosophy, but with a stronger enterprise angle. It may also indicate that Google is preparing a dedicated desktop app for business customers, one that can surface Android Studio more directly.

The Skills Marketplace itself is taking shape as a place where users can choose from predefined skills designed for Gemini, and in some cases tailored for Google services. Based on the current test builds, the feature seems to include three major pieces: a skills management interface, a Skills Builder, and the marketplace where those skills can be discovered and selected.

Google has not widely released these components yet, but some organizations may already have access to early versions. The presence of a developer-facing Skill Registry on Google’s agent platform adds more context. It suggests that the marketplace could serve as the user-facing layer on top of a more flexible system that Google can adjust depending on account type or product tier.

For enterprise teams, the value is straightforward. The kinds of features being explored, such as dashboards, approval workflows and reporting interfaces, are often requested by companies but can take time to get through engineering queues. A marketplace of prebuilt skills could make it easier for teams to stand up those tools without waiting for custom development.

There is still no public timeline for release, and any of the pieces now in testing could remain experimental. Even so, the direction is clear. Google wants Gemini to become a more complete surface for work, one that brings together its scattered AI and developer tools in a way that feels closer to a super app.

That goal puts Google in line with rivals that are also trying to centralize their AI offerings, but the company appears to be taking a different route by tying together enterprise productivity, development and custom skills inside the Gemini ecosystem.