Where the shared inbox stops being useful
If your business runs on Google Workspace, a few addresses quietly carry most of the day’s real work. The sales@, accounts@ and support@ inbox. Enquiries, invoices, complaints and approvals all pour into the same place, and because everyone can see it, no one truly owns it.
You have felt where that goes. A message sits unread because each person assumed someone else would pick it up. The same questions get answered from scratch every week. An invoice gets buried under a thread and missed until the supplier chases it. Someone spends the first hour of the day reading the list and copying details into the CRM by hand. The inbox stops being a tool for getting work done. It is a backlog with a search box.
The reflex is to set up a few Gmail filters, or switch on whatever AI feature appeared in the menu last month, and hope the sorting takes care of itself. It rarely does.
Why switching on a feature does not fix it
A native filter moves mail based on the sender or a word in the subject. That is useful for the easy cases and useless for the hard ones, which are exactly the messages that cost you. A filter cannot tell an angry complaint from a routine query, cannot read that an invoice is overdue, and cannot put the right record into your CRM. The built-in AI suggestions are clever at finishing a sentence, but they do not know your pricing, your policies or which client matters most.
The deeper problem is that none of it is built around how your team works. The categories that matter to you, the wording you reply with, the system your records live in, the rules for what gets escalated. That knowledge sits in people’s heads, and an out-of-the-box feature has no access to it. So you get generic sorting, drafts that sound like no one, and a system that still leaves the re-keying and the judgement to a person.
Getting it right means three things, and we treat them as the foundations rather than extras.
First, your knowledge has to be organised and findable, not scattered across threads and personal folders. We build a clear label structure and a tidy way of capturing what comes in, so a message and its attachments end up somewhere the whole team can rely on. That is a healthy data ecosystem applied to email.
Second, the automation only works if your own information is something the AI can read. A draft in your voice depends on the system having your real past replies and policy wording. Triage that ranks the right client first depends on it knowing which clients matter. We make that internal material accessible to the tools doing the work, so the answers come from your business.

How we deliver it
We start narrow and prove it works before widening, so risk stays small and you see the payoff early.
- Map one inbox. We pick the single shared address that hurts most and watch how mail moves through it. What arrives, where it stalls, and what counts as urgent to you.
- Test triage on your history. We build the classifier against months of your past mail and measure how often it sorts the way your team would have, so you trust the numbers before it goes live.
- Connect the systems. We wire Gmail to your CRM, helpdesk and Drive on the API with least-privilege access, so capture and filing happen automatically and the record exists even when nobody logs it.
- Keep a person on the send button. Anything that goes out under your name stays a draft until a human reviews it. The automation prepares, sorts and files; people decide and send.
- Document and hand over. We write down the label structure, the rules and the integration so the setup keeps running as staff come and go, and stays a shared platform your team can rely on, not knowledge locked in one person’s head.
When Gmail automation is the right call, and when it is not
This pays off fastest when your business is on Google Workspace and a real share of work arrives by email, especially through shared inboxes a team struggles to stay on top of. The more repetitive the sorting and re-keying, the sooner triage, drafting and capture earn their keep.
It is the wrong starting point when the work does not really live in email. If your enquiries already come through a web form, a portal or an API, we would automate that channel directly. If your business runs on Microsoft 365, Outlook and the Microsoft Graph are the natural equivalent and we would build there. And if the volume in a given inbox is genuinely low, a tidy set of filters and a clear ownership rule may serve you better. We will tell you plainly which one you are before you spend.
What we deliver around it
Gmail automation sits inside the wider work of getting your tools and data working together. See how it connects with our AI agents, our automation and efficiency work, and our integration services.
It earns its keep across sectors, from professional services to insurance and retail and ecommerce.



