Google dropped Pomelli into public beta on October 28, 2025, giving small business owners a shortcut past the blank canvas. The AI tool scans a company website, pulls color schemes and fonts, and spits out campaign copy in seconds. One solo founder called it "like hiring a junior designer who never sleeps."
What it does and why founders care. Pomelli reads what Google calls Business DNA: the visual fingerprint hiding in a site's layout, typography and imagery. It translates those patterns into editable headlines, body text and image suggestions that match the brand. Users download assets as HTML, PNG or PDF and plug them straight into content calendars or ad platforms. The tool targets the creative bottleneck that burns weekends for lean teams who lack design chops or agency budgets.
How the engine runs. Point Pomelli at a live URL. The system ingests the page, identifies color palettes and type hierarchies, then generates a draft campaign in under a minute. Marketers tweak copy or swap images before export. The interface skips jargon in favor of plainspoken prompts. Google designed the workflow to feel less like coding and more like ordering takeout.
The timing and the competition. Pomelli arrives as AI marketing tools multiply across the creator economy. Entrepreneurs in the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand can test the beta now. Google has not announced pricing or rollout dates for other regions. The company is collecting feedback to tune the model and may later let users publish directly to ad networks without leaving the dashboard. Early testers should track click‑through rates and conversion metrics as the algorithm learns.
What they are saying. A Google Labs spokesperson told press that Pomelli
"brings studio level creative within reach of the kitchen table entrepreneur,"
a nod to the millions of U.S. small businesses still building campaigns in free design apps. Whether the tool's output can compete with human wit remains an open question, but the speed gain is measurable: days collapse into minutes.
The beta invites makers to experiment. The real test will be whether Pomelli's drafts convert browsers into buyers or simply add polish to noise.




