Cheat sheet
Gemini cheat sheet
A one-page reference for Google Gemini at work: the AI in the Gemini app and across Google Workspace. UK English. Check anything that matters against a trusted source.
Key capabilities by level
Foundations
- Draft, rewrite and summarise text in the Gemini app.
- Ask everyday questions and get plain-English explanations.
- Upload a file or image and ask questions about it.
Practitioner
- Use Gemini inside Gmail, Docs and Sheets to draft and summarise in place.
- Run Deep Research to gather and organise sources on a topic, then check them.
- Work with long documents thanks to a large context window.
Power User
- Build a Gem (a saved assistant with its own instructions) for a repeated task.
- Summarise a meeting in Google Meet and pull out the actions.
- Combine Workspace grounding so answers draw on your own Drive files.
Tier map in three lines
- Free: Gemini app access with everyday limits.
- Individuals: Google AI Plus, Pro and Ultra step up usage, features and model access (Pro adds Deep Research; Ultra adds the highest limits).
- Organisations: Google Workspace plans add Gemini through AI add-ons for business, with admin controls.
See the current Gemini plans and Workspace AI options for today's details.
Five best prompts
- Summarise this email thread and draft a reply confirming the Friday deadline. [in Gmail]
- In this doc, tighten the executive summary to five sentences without losing any key point. [in Docs]
- In this sheet, work out the monthly total per Fernway region and explain the formula you used. [in Sheets]
- Run deep research on this topic and give me a briefing with sources I can open and check. [topic]
- Summarise the meeting recording: decisions made, open questions, and who owns each action.
Top three mistakes
- Assuming web-connected means always right. Gemini can still be wrong or out of date; open the sources and confirm.
- Trusting it on high-stakes facts. For anything legal, financial or health-related, verify elsewhere before acting.
- Vague prompts. Say who it's for, what you want, and the length or format; the reply is only as clear as the ask.