I’ve spent more than four decades covering technology, and one pattern has repeated itself through every major platform shift: the winners aren’t the companies that react fastest, but the ones that anticipate where things are going and move early. At this year’s Google I/O , it was clear that Google has no intention of playing catch-up in the AI era — it’s positioning itself to shape what comes next.

At the heart of Google’s announcements was a fundamental rethinking of what AI should do. The company has moved well beyond chatbots and keyword search. What Google unveiled at I/O was a comprehensive vision built around agentic AI and multimodal capabilities, with systems that do not just answer questions but act on your behalf across a growing range of tasks, data types, and environments.

The centerpiece is Gemini, Google’s core AI platform, which has been significantly upgraded with new models and agents. These aren’t incremental improvements. Gemini now works fluidly across Google’s browser ecosystem and deeply integrates with Workspace which is the productivity suite used by hundreds of millions of people and businesses worldwide. More importantly, it handles a widening array of inputs: video, voice and even physical world models. That's a meaningful leap from text-based AI.

Google also introduced new creative tools and hardware extensions, including Android XR glasses. Google signals that they see AI as something that will eventually live on us and around us, not just on our screens. Indeed, at Google I/O, they introduced the first companies to adopt Android XR , featuring two styles created in partnership with Warby Parker and Korean luxury eyewear brand Gentle Monster. They also demoed Xreal's version codenamed Aura .

Why This Matters for the Broader Market

Here’s the context that I think gets lost in the headline-chasing that surrounds these big developer conferences: Google isn’t just competing with Microsoft and OpenAI for mindshare. It’s fighting to defend its core business. Search has been the engine of Google’s dominance for 25 years, generating the revenue that funds everything else. Generative AI, if mishandled, could erode that foundation. The move to agentic AI is, in part, Google’s answer to that threat. They are transforming search from a query-and-result model into a continuous, intelligent assistant that acts rather than just informs.

At the same time, Google is one of the world’s largest cloud providers, and the hyperscaler wars are intensifying. AWS and Microsoft Azure have both made aggressive partnerships with leading AI model vendors. Google’s response is to build from within, betting that integrating Gemini across its own stack, from search to Workspace to cloud infrastructure, gives it a differentiation advantage that licensing agreements can't replicate.

Google also has a uniquely powerful data advantage. The billions of search queries it processes every day create a continuous feedback loop for training and refining its AI models, giving the company a level of real-world insight and scale that few competitors can match.

The Agentic Inflection Point

The most significant trend on display at I/O wasn’t any single product announcement, it was the cumulative weight of Google’s investment in agentic functionality. Over the next one to two years, agentic AI will move from novelty to necessity across enterprise and consumer applications alike. Every major platform vendor from Microsoft, Salesforce, ServiceNow and others, is building toward this. Google's announcements show it understands that the companies setting the agentic standard today will define the productivity landscape for the next decade.

That’s not hyperbole. Agentic AI is an existential challenge to how personal productivity and enterprise software have operated for 30 years. The old model of human-initiated task and software execution is being inverted. AI agents will increasingly initiate, plan and complete multi-step workflows with minimal human intervention. That changes everything from how software is priced to how IT infrastructure is designed.

Google’s I/O 2026 was more than a product showcase. It was a declaration of strategic intent. The company now has the models, the distribution, the data advantage and a coherent platform vision to compete across every layer of the AI stack. The real question is execution: can Google evolve search without undermining its core revenue engine, while simultaneously winning in the enterprise against deeply entrenched rivals?

Based on what I saw at I/O, Google understands the magnitude of that challenge and is moving with unusual urgency to meet it. So are its competitors. The next phase of the AI race won’t be defined by who builds the best models, but by who turns them into indispensable platforms.

Disclosure: Google and Microsoft subscribe to the research reports from the company I founded, Creative Strategies, along with many other high-tech companies around the world.