Artificial intelligence has integrated deeply into our lives. From normal tasks like drafting an email response to advanced tasks like image or presentation generation, we’re relying heavily on the AI assistants. However, there’s one thing that’s not only weird but also irritating about the AI tools. When it comes to the output, the prompt you enter is the ultimate king. It decides if the output will be good or not. And it takes some time experimenting with numerous prompts and finding the best one for ourselves.
What’s even more frustrating is that even after finding the best prompt, we have to enter the same thing every time to get the desired results. To solve this problem, Google has introduced a new Chrome Skills feature. The feature allows you to save and deploy your absolute best prompts directly within your browser window, effectively ending the era of repetitive copy-pasting. Using it will not only boost your overall productivity but will also ensure you get similar and desired results every time.
What is the Google Chrome Skills feature?
The feature was introduced recently as part of Chrome’s recent wave of AI innovations. It serves as a smart, reusable template gallery tailored to your favorite AI tasks. If you are already familiar with the Gemini side panel in Google Chrome, you know how convenient it is to have an intelligent assistant sitting right next to your open active tabs. However, before this update, running a routine task, like asking the AI to polish an email or check the tone of an article, required you to manually type out the exact prompt every single time.
The Google Chrome Skills feature eliminates this friction. When you discover an instruction format that generates perfect results, you can save it as a custom “Skill” directly from your active chat history. The next time you need to execute that specific task, you don’t have to retype the whole prompt or hunt through endless historical chat logs to copy and paste it.
Step-by-Step Guide: How to Set Up and Use Chrome Skills
Getting this feature up and running takes less than two minutes, but you need to meet a few system prerequisites first. Before anything, ensure your Google Chrome browser is updated to the absolute latest version. Next, verify that your browser language is explicitly set to English (U.S.); otherwise, the necessary activation icons will not display.
Step 1: Before anything, enable Skills on Chrome. To do that, type chrome://flags in your search bar, hit enter, and enable “Skills.”

Step 2: Now, enable Gemini in Chrome. You can also open the related webpage since the prompt will be entered.


Step 2: Now, enter the prompt you would want to add to skills. For example:
“Read the current webpage and give me the 5 most important facts in bullet points.”
Press Enter and allow the AI to generate its response.

Step 3: Hover around the response, click on the “light-bolt” icon, and then click on “Save as a skill.”

Step 4: Give the skill your desired name, add instructions, and save it.

Step 5: That’s it. The skill will be saved. You will be able to browse all the skills, add preset skills, or customize them by going to chrome://skills/browser.

Step 6: To deploy your new automation tool, visit any website and open the Gemini side panel. Click into the text input field and type a forward slash (/). A drop-down menu will instantly display all your saved custom Skills. Click the one you need, and Gemini will immediately execute the command using the active webpage as its source context.
Final Verdict
The Google Chrome Skills feature is a massive step forward in making artificial intelligence feel like a seamless extension of our operating system rather than a disjointed external tool. It eliminates the tiny friction points that quietly drain our cognitive energy throughout the day and makes the whole experience much more seamless and intuitive.
There are, of course, a few limitations to keep in mind. The feature is heavily ecosystem-locked. It is tied strictly to the Google Chrome browser and the Gemini side panel. If your workflow relies on alternative AI models like Claude or ChatGPT, you won’t be able to utilize these shortcuts natively. Additionally, the feature is somewhat hidden behind menus and specific regional language settings, meaning many users might miss out on it entirely.
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