Gemini for Business prepares NotebookLM integration and Skills

Google is developing deeper integration of NotebookLM and pre-made skills within Gemini for Business, with hidden features surfacing in recent builds.

· 2 min read
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Google appears to be preparing a wave of new capabilities for Gemini for Business, with several hidden features now surfacing in the platform's latest builds. Among the most notable is a deeper integration with NotebookLM, which would allow Business-tier users to view their own NotebookLM notebooks directly from the Gemini front page.

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A pre-made NotebookLM agent has also appeared within the agents section, described as a tool to summarize and take notes for research with AI, suggesting it could pull data from notebooks and make it available within Gemini's conversational interface. This kind of integration already rolled out to consumer accounts and Workspace Enterprise and Education users in January 2026, so its arrival on the Business tier would bring feature parity across Google's paid Workspace plans.

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For small and mid-sized teams who rely on curated knowledge bases in NotebookLM, having that research accessible inside Gemini without switching tools could meaningfully change day-to-day workflows.

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Separately, Google's Skills tab within Gemini for Business appears to be making progress. While still non-functional and hidden, the tab now displays a list of pre-made skills from Google, including options for code review, writing PRDs, and a meta-skill called "Skill Architect" designed to help users create their own custom skills. A new skill creation menu has also appeared, with fields for name, description, and instructions. The concept of skills already exists in Google's developer-facing tools like Gemini CLI and Antigravity, where users can install and manage specialized instruction sets, but surfacing them in the Business web interface would make the feature accessible to a much broader, non-developer audience. The inclusion of Skill Architect in particular hints at Google's intent to let organizations build reusable, domain-specific AI assistants without needing technical expertise.

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Finally, a hidden "AI Coding" button has appeared with a new label, though it currently serves as little more than a directory pointing users to existing tools. Google already offers Antigravity as a full agentic IDE and Gemini CLI as a terminal-based assistant, and this button appears to consolidate access to those tools, including instructions for installing the Gemini command line interface. None of these features have a confirmed release date, but the progress visible in development builds suggests Google is steadily building out its Business offering to compete more directly with enterprise AI platforms from Microsoft and others.