We've all seen this scene before. An organization deploys Gemini, the first demos circulate, some ideas inspire the teams, then everyone faces the same question: ok, but concretely, what do I do with it?
The problem has never been the lack of interest. It's the lack of a starting point. People know Gemini can help them. They just don't always know what to ask him, how far to go, or what use really sticks to what they do on a daily basis.
That's exactly what we wanted to solve in GSkills.
Until now, the Gemini use cases lived in a rather classic logic. Cards, a few filters, a procedure to open. It had the merit of existing, but it remained a showcase. We browsed ideas, we sometimes came across something relevant, but the transition to action remained an extra effort.
Today, this experience changes in nature.
The new page dedicated to Gemini use cases no longer just shows ideas. It helps to find the right use, to understand how to activate it, and to get started right away.

Look for a use as you would talk to a colleague
The most visible change is that we no longer navigate in a catalog. We describe what we are looking for, and the platform sorts it out.
Before, you already had to have a vague idea of what you wanted. Explore the filters, cross the categories, click on a title that seemed to stick. It worked, but it assumed a minimum of familiarity with the subject.
Now, the entry is much more direct. You can write what you do, what you are looking to produce, or simply describe your job. \"I am an accountant\", \"I have to summarize a long document\", \"I work on financial data\". GSkills understands the intention and raises the relevant use cases, in a clearer and more actionable format.
This is a real change because it responds to the number one brake around Gemini: the lack of landmarks. When you don't know where to start, even a good idea remains theoretical. There, the friction decreases. We move faster from \"it looks interesting\" to \"I'm testing now\".
Sheets that really make you want to get started
The other big change is what happens when you open a use case.
Before, we came across an idea, sometimes a procedure. Useful, but a little dry. Now, each use case has its own sheet, designed to give everything you need to take action without hesitation.
There is a prompt ready to copy, a visual preview when it is relevant, tips for use, and a direct link to the application concerned. Everything is there, in the right order, without having to look elsewhere.

This is important because someone who discovers Gemini doesn't just need inspiration. He needs a framework. See what the result looks like, understand in what context it works well, have a first concrete point of support. That's exactly what these sheets bring.
A page that adapts to the profession
There is a more discreet evolution, but one that profoundly changes the feeling: the page no longer shows the same thing to everyone.
When the business information is filled in GSkills, the use cases that come up in priority are consistent with what the person does on a daily basis. Someone who spends their days in spreadsheets will first see uses related to analysis, data structuring, automation. Someone who works on recruitment or team organization will find uses related to writing, interview preparation, information synthesis.
It's simple, but it changes everything. We no longer ask everyone to sort through a generic catalog. We directly propose avenues that speak. An accountant no longer comes across use cases designed for marketing. He first discovers what looks like his day: data, tables, synthesis, analysis. It's faster, and it's also more reassuring.
Adoption becomes easier to manage
This redesign is not just an interface change. It also simplifies the work of those who manage adoption internally.
Already, because it's much easier to promote. When the experience is clear and guided, you no longer need to explain at length where to click and what to filter. You can say \"go to the page, describe what you do, and see what comes out\". It's a simple message to get across.
Then, because the page now lives fully in GSkills. It is no longer an external brick displayed in the interface. It is an integral part of the product, with a real continuity of experience.
And finally, it is perhaps the most underestimated point, the monitoring improves. The use cases being integrated directly into the platform, it becomes possible to observe what is really happening. Which uses attract attention, which are consulted, which trigger an action. This is not a detail. This is what makes it possible to move from content made available to content that is actually managed.
The benefit is twofold: a simpler experience to adopt, and better visibility into what really interests people.
What it changes in depth
Beyond the interface, there is a broader subject.
In many organizations, the real problem with Gemini is not access to the tool. It's the ability of teams to identify uses that really serve them, to build confidence, and to transform technical access into concrete practices.
A list of ideas, even well presented, is not enough to trigger this. What makes the difference is to guide people towards relevant scenarios, to simplify their first steps, and to reduce the effort required to test in good conditions.
This is exactly what this new page does. It places AI at the heart of discovery, then puts the person in a position to act immediately. It changes the way we think about support. We no longer make content available hoping that people will seize it. We help them find what can serve them, at the right time, in their context.
The challenge is not to show that Gemini can do many things. The challenge is to help everyone discover the ones that matter to them.
What really changes, in one sentence
Previously, the page presented Gemini use cases.
Today, it recommends, guides, and helps to take action.
On paper, the nuance may seem subtle. In practice, it changes a lot. Finding a good starting idea takes less time. Promoting internal use becomes more natural. And the technological promise is more easily transformed into daily practice.
This is the type of evolution that we are building in GSkills: less theoretical, more contextualized, more useful, and easier to adopt experiences.
Where to find this new feature
The new experience is available directly in GSkills for the concerned instances in the AI menu.
It allows you to search for uses in natural language, explore a selection adapted to the context, open a complete sheet, copy a prompt, consult tips, and open the related application or procedure when relevant.
It's a new concrete entry point to get started with Gemini, and a good example of the difference between making content available and building a real adoption experience.


