Google is working on a Skills Marketplace designed for its Gemini Business and Enterprise tiers, a move that would give organizations a centralized hub to discover, share, and deploy AI capabilities across their workflows. The company is also reportedly considering extending the marketplace to consumer users.
Google’s enterprise AI push has been anything but subtle
The Google Skills platform launched in October 2025, offering free training, certifications, and hands-on labs focused on AI agents, enterprise search, and workflows.
Then came the Gemini Enterprise Agent Ready program, or GEAR. The initiative provides monthly learning credits with an ambitious goal of upskilling one million developers to build enterprise-grade agents.
The Gemini Business edition itself starts at $21 per seat per month, packaging secure AI agents, multi-agent workflows, and deep integration with Google Workspace apps.
Google is also set to preview Gemini Spark in 2026, a product featuring autonomous 24/7 personal agents designed to handle tasks for business users around the clock.
What a Skills Marketplace actually means in practice
Independent marketplaces have already started popping up in the ecosystem. Some use SKILL.md formats compatible with Gemini CLI, essentially open-source skill definitions that developers can share and remix. Google building an official marketplace would bring structure, security vetting, and enterprise-grade trust to what’s currently a somewhat fragmented landscape.
What this means for the competitive landscape
The GEAR program’s goal of training one million developers creates a supply-side ecosystem for the marketplace.
The $21 per seat per month starting price for Gemini Business makes the barrier to entry relatively low for mid-sized companies.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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