What's New In Google Forms?
*image created by Gemini
@LisaBerghoff
Sometimes, while we are using the tools we use everyday, we forget that there are engineers pouring over pages and pages of feature requests and they are working to make the tools better. They quietly add features, or move buttons, or subtly make adjustments and these can be easily overlooked. Google Forms has recently gotten enough upgrades that I thought it would be a good idea to call out some of these that you might not know are there. Here are my favorites.
1. Automatically close a form on a specific date/time or when the responses have reached a limit.
I used to use an add-on for this and I'm thrilled that it is now built-in. Once your form is published, click the lines next to the published button to see the options. Here you can turn the form on or off to responders. You can also determine when the form should close. Choose a date and time or you can choose an amount of responses after which your form will no longer receive responses.
2. Response Summary For Open-Ended Questions
Asking open-ended questions is a common way to get feedback and suggestions. The format of reading those in a spreadsheet is kind of a drag. Now, when you click the responses tab, you will first see an AI summary of the responses, with the actual responses below. Seeing a summary can be a real time saver for you. It will recognize patterns and trends in the responses. If you are not happy with the AI summary, you can click "retry" and give it another go.
3. Help Me Create With Gemini
When you start off creating a form, you are now directed to a Gemini page where you can enter a prompt and have it get started on your form. You can also include the @ symbol to include content from your own files. If you have an assignment in your Google drive and want it to create a quiz, or an exit ticket, just write a prompt and include the file. This feature also supports multiple languages.
4. Granular Sharing And Access Control
You can now specify exactly who can respond to your form. Instead of just limiting to inside vs. outside your organization, you can now indicate specific people you want to be able to respond to your form. The "send" button has been replaced with a "publish" button. This allows you to manage access to both responders and editors. Also, the responder link is already shortened for you.
5. Set Form Defaults
If you find yourself consistently going in and changing the settings in your forms and wondering how you can get your forms to start out the way you want them, this is for you. In the "settings" tab, scroll to where it says "defaults". These settings will be applied to your current form AND new forms that you create in the future. You can determine that it will always (or never) collect email addresses. You can also make all questions required by default.
What are your favorite uses for Google forms? Want some help getting up and running with your forms? I'm here to help!




















