A new AI-powered tool has come to help small businesses deal with social media and advertising: Google has quietly rolled out Pomelli, an experimental marketing platform that promises to turn any company website into a stream of on-brand social posts and ad creatives.
Built in collaboration with Google DeepMind, the tool is available now in public beta across the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. It’s Google’s latest attempt to solve a persistent problem: small and midsize businesses simply don’t have the time, budget or design chops to pump out consistent marketing content.
How Pomelli Actually Works?
The process is refreshingly straightforward: You plug in your website URL, and Pomelli gets to work scanning your site and existing images. From there, it builds what Google refers to as your “Business DNA”, essentially a brand profile that captures your tone of voice, fonts, color palette, and visual style.
Once that profile is locked in, Pomelli starts generating campaign ideas tailored to your business. If you don’t like what it suggests, you can type in your own prompt to move the tool in a different direction.
The final step: creating actual assets-social media posts, website graphics, and ad creatives aligned with your brand identity. You can tweak everything in the tool before downloading and deploying across channels.
It is the kind of workflow that could save solo entrepreneurs and small marketing teams hours of work each week. Instead of wrestling with design software or hiring freelancers for every campaign, businesses could potentially create a month’s worth of content in an afternoon.
The Catches You Should Know About
Before anyone gets too excited, Google is being up-front about Pomelli’s experimental status. The company lets people know that quality may vary and will take some time to improve. Translation: it’s gonna put out some wonky outputs and creative misses while this AI learns.
The beta also has limited scope: It currently only works in English and is restricted to those four countries, leaving a huge chunk of potential users on the sidelines for the time being.

Perhaps more concerning, though, is what Google hasn’t said. The company has been notably silent on how it handles site data, uploaded assets, and the creatives generated through the platform. In an era in which data privacy is a big business concern, that lack of transparency could be a dealbreaker for many would-be adopters.
There’s also the reality that AI-generated marketing content still requires human oversight. No matter how smart Pomelli gets, someone is going to have to review outputs for compliance issues, tone accuracy, and factual claims. The tool might accelerate production, but it’s not going to eliminate the need for editorial judgment altogether.
Can Pomelli’s Google Ecosystem Advantage Outshine Canva, Adobe, and Meta?
Google is anything but alone in chasing this opportunity. Indeed, the space of AI-assisted marketing tools is getting crowded fast, and Pomelli faces some serious competition.
Canva has been aggressively expanding its AI features, making design accessible to non-designers. Adobe Express is doing something similar, with the backing of the Adobe creative suite ecosystem. Meta has rolled out its own AI ad tools that plug directly into Facebook and Instagram advertising workflows. Each platform is essentially promising the same thing: faster, easier creative production for time-strapped marketers.
Pomelli, Google’s AI Marketing Experiment and Its Ecosystem
What might give Pomelli an edge is deep integration with the broader Google ecosystem. For businesses already using Google Ads, Analytics, and other Google marketing tooling, Pomelli could slot in naturally. But that’s speculative at this point.
Google has not announced pricing plans or timelines about when Pomelli might transition from beta to full release. The company touts that feedback from the current crop of beta users will shape the future of the tool, so it seems they’re still figuring out what businesses actually need from a platform like this.
For the time being, Pomelli is yet another interesting experiment in how AI might reshape day-to-day business operations. Whether it becomes an essential tool for small business marketing or just another abandoned Google project remains to be seen. The beta is open if you are in one of the four available countries to try it, but again, keep your expectations in line.
But the real test will be whether Pomelli can deliver consistent quality and earn the trust of businesses that are already drowning in AI-powered marketing promises.




