Somewhere in a Los Angeles city government office, a municipal employee who used to take an hour to draft a standard communication is now witnessing a first draft, compiled from emails, previous documents, and internal chat threads, appear in a matter of seconds. It’s not science fiction. By the end of 2025, over 27,500 city employees in Los Angeles had been given permission to incorporate Google’s Gemini AI into their daily tasks. The fact that this is a local government rather than a Silicon Valley startup speaks volumes about how quickly things are actually progressing.
On the surface, Google’s October 2025 Gemini Enterprise launch appeared to be a product announcement. However, it was also a declaration of intent in a rivalry that is changing the fundamental structure of office work. It’s “the new front door for AI in the workplace,” as Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian carefully put it. Google is offering more than just a feature. It is marketing a substitute for how people go about their own workdays: finding files, creating documents, processing data, and creating presentations—tasks that have taken up a significant amount of human time without anyone ever really considering whether they should.
| Category | Detail |
|---|---|
| Product name | Gemini Enterprise — launched October 2025 as Google’s unified AI platform for workplace automation across Docs, Sheets, Slides, Gmail, and more |
| Announced by | Thomas Kurian, CEO of Google Cloud; positioned as “the new front door for AI in the workplace” |
| Government adoption — Los Angeles | 27,500 city employees in Los Angeles authorized to use Gemini to improve communication, workforce productivity, and AI training (announced October 2025) |
| Key Workspace features (March 2026) | “Help me create” in Docs — pulls context from Drive, Gmail, and Chat to generate personalized drafts; “match doc” style-matching feature for multi-author documents |
| Enterprise AI adoption rate | 65% of all Google Cloud customers already using AI products; nine of the top ten AI labs use Google Cloud infrastructure |
| McKinsey AI maturity finding | Only 1% of business leaders describe their companies as AI-mature; 92% plan to increase AI investments over next three years |
| Key enterprise customers | Klarna, Mercedes, Figma, GAP, Gordon Foods, Macquarie Bank, Deutsche Telekom, Deloitte, DBS Bank, and the US Department of Energy |
| Competitor context | Microsoft Copilot embedded across Office 365 suite; Google Gemini Enterprise positioned as direct rival with broader model openness and 100,000+ partner ecosystem |
| Employee AI readiness (McKinsey) | 13% of employees already use gen AI for 30%+ of daily tasks — three times more than C-suite leaders estimate; millennials aged 35–44 most active users (90% comfortable with AI at work) |
| Analyst assessment (March 2026) | Info-Tech Research Group calls Gemini Workspace updates “incremental improvements, not revolutionary features” — but notes real value in embedding AI into daily workflows |
Because product announcements often overlook what actually occurs at a person’s desk, it is important to understand the practical changes within Workspace in concrete terms. Google Docs’ “help me create” function does more than just produce generic text in response to a prompt. It creates drafts that are meant to feel specific rather than generic by taking context from the user’s own Drive files, Gmail messages, and Chat history.

When five people have contributed to a file and the tone has drifted in five different directions—a situation that most office workers will recognize right away—a “match doc” function can analyze the writing style of an existing document and apply it across new content. It’s still unclear if these features will deliver consistently. The March 2026 Workspace updates were described as “incremental improvements more than revolutionary features” by an analyst at Info-Tech Research Group. This is a fair assessment, even though the long-term direction is obviously something larger.
Here, the larger context is important. According to McKinsey’s 2025 workplace AI report, only 1% of business executives say their organizations have reached AI maturity, which means AI is actually integrated into workflows rather than just being in a pilot stage. Over the next three years, 92% of businesses intend to increase their AI investments; however, the gap between spending and outcomes is still quite large. By making Gemini something a person encounters during their workday rather than something they have to consciously seek out and launch, Google is attempting to close that gap, at least in the productivity software space. The idea is that standalone tools are disregarded while embedded tools are utilized. When Microsoft integrated Copilot into Office 365, it realized the same thing. Google is vying for the same space.
The customer list that Google released in conjunction with Gemini Enterprise provides insight into the current state of enterprise adoption. The US Department of Energy, Mercedes, Figma, GAP, Deutsche Telekom, Macquarie Bank, and Klarna are not experimental early adopters. They are sizable, well-known businesses in the government, retail, automotive, and financial sectors. Nine of the top ten AI labs use Google Cloud infrastructure, and 65% of all Google Cloud users currently use at least one AI product. That’s a significant foundation. Although it implies Google isn’t starting from scratch in terms of credibility, it doesn’t ensure success at the application layer.
Employees are using AI at work about three times more than their own managers and executives think they are, according to a detail in the McKinsey research that is often overlooked but is likely the most intriguing finding in the entire document. Thirteen percent of employees say they use generative AI in over thirty percent of their daily tasks. According to C-suite executives, that percentage is 4%. The discrepancy between what individuals are truly doing and what the leadership believes they are doing indicates a genuine issue. Adoption of AI in the workplace isn’t awaiting corporate approval. Before any official policy or training program has caught up, it is taking place in the background, in individual workflows. Google’s wager with Gemini Enterprise is based in part on the idea that formalizing and centralizing that behavior—providing it with infrastructure, governance, and cross-app connectivity—is more beneficial than allowing it to occur dispersed and unmonitored.
As this happens, it’s difficult to ignore the feeling that the office as an organizational and physical concept is being subtly renegotiated in ways that won’t be fully apparent for a few more years. The tools are evolving more quickly than the surrounding management structures, more quickly than the majority of training programs, and in many organizations, more quickly than the budgetary decision-makers can comprehend. The scope of what Gemini Enterprise is attempting, from the LA city government to legal teams at Fortune 500 companies, suggests this is no longer a product category to watch from a distance. However, Google is not the only company pushing in this direction—Microsoft, Salesforce, and others are all in the same race. It’s at work already.