Google Workspace Studio is a game-changer for personal productivity. It allows anyone to build agentic workflows — connecting Gmail, Sheets, and Docs with Gemini-powered logic — without writing complex code. It’s perfect for the “power user” who wants to automate their daily grind.But as these workflows move from personal experiments to team-wide processes, we hit a wall.The most common limitation? The missing loop.Disclaimer: I work at Google in the cloud team. Opinions are my own and not the views of my current employer. The experience shared in this blog post dates back to my professional career prior to joining Google.The Scaling Wall: Why “Out-of-the-Box” Isn’t EnoughWorkspace Studio is excellent for linear, “if this, then that” actions. However, once you have a list of 500 rows in a spreadsheet that each need three different LLM prompts and an automated email follow-up, the manual trigger approach falls apart.Standard Workspace Studio flows lack native coding constructs like sophisticated loops or state management. If you try to force a massive dataset through a single linear flow, it becomes difficult to monitor, prone to timeouts, and nearly impossible to scale.The Innovation: The “Sheet-as-a-Queue” PatternTo solve this, I’ve developed a technical concept — proven in practice — that brings enterprise-grade scaling to the Workspace environment using a simple Queuing System.Instead of trying to make Workspace Studio “loop” internally, we externalize the logic using Google Sheets and a touch of Apps Script.How it works:The Queue: You create a Google Sheet that acts as your queue. Here you add the list of items that need to be processed, for instance the list of contacts or customers for your workflow.The Trigger: An Apps Script monitors the queue sheet. When new values are added, it triggers to move an item from the queue to an input sheet that acts as the “Work-in-Progress” (WIP) board.function processQueueChange(e) { const ss = SpreadsheetApp.getActiveSpreadsheet(); // --- CONFIGURATION --- const queueSheetName = 'Queue'; const inputSheetName = 'Input'; const customerColumnHeader = 'Customers'; // Must match the header in row 1 exactly const inputTargetCell = 'A2'; // The specific cell on 'Input' sheet you want to copy to // --------------------- const inputSheet = ss.getSheetByName(inputSheetName); const queueSheet = ss.getSheetByName(queueSheetName); // Exit if either sheet doesn't exist if (!inputSheet || !queueSheet) return; // 1. Check if the target cell in the 'Input' sheet is currently empty const targetRange = inputSheet.getRange(inputTargetCell); if (targetRange.getValue() !== "") { return; // Stop running if it already has a value } // 2. Find the 'Customers' column in the 'Queue' sheet // Assuming headers are in Row 1 const lastCol = queueSheet.getLastColumn(); if (lastCol === 0) return; // Queue sheet is completely empty const headers = queueSheet.getRange(1, 1, 1, lastCol).getValues()[0]; const colIndex = headers.indexOf(customerColumnHeader) + 1; if (colIndex === 0) { return; // The 'Customers' column header was not found } // 3. Find the last non-empty value in that specific column const lastRow = queueSheet.getLastRow(); if (lastRow < 2) return; // No data below the header const colValues = queueSheet.getRange(2, colIndex, lastRow - 1, 1).getValues(); let lastCustomer = ""; let lastCustomerRowIdx = -1; // Loop backwards from the bottom to find the very last item for (let i = colValues.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) { if (colValues[i][0] !== "") { lastCustomer = colValues[i][0]; lastCustomerRowIdx = i + 2; // +2 to account for 0-indexing and header row break; } } // 4. Copy the value to the Input sheet if a customer was found if (lastCustomer !== "") { targetRange.setValue(lastCustomer); // Optional: If you want to REMOVE the customer from the queue after copying, // uncomment the line below: queueSheet.getRange(lastCustomerRowIdx, colIndex).clearContent(); }}The Processing: Workspace Studio monitors the input sheet, picks up the single item, performs the complex agentic work (multiple prompts, data lookups, etc.), and returns the output to an output sheet. Here you can vary in the different steps that you want to include, where the example below only uses a single one.Workspace Studio Flow Configuration ExampleThe Cleanup: Once the task is complete, the script removes the item from the input sheet.The Loop: The Apps Script checks if there are more items. If yes, it moves the next item from the queue to the input sheet which will spin up a new workflow instance.This creates a “pseudo-loop” that can process many items synchronously without breaking the single-flow execution limits. You could extend to asynchronous processing by adding a specific number of inputs and duplicating the workflow.The “Sheet-as-a-Queue” PatternTaking it Further: The Workspace “Pub/Sub” ModelIf we want to move from “personal productivity” to “team-scale automation,” we can borrow a concept from Google Cloud: Pub/Sub (Publisher/Subscriber).Imagine a single Google Sheet where you “publish” a topic (e.g., “New Customer Onboarding”). Instead of one flow picking it up, you can have multiple subscribers — different Workspace Studio workflows — each triggered by that same entry.Workflow A generates a personalized welcome draft in Gmail.Workflow B creates a custom project tracking doc.Workflow C analyzes the customer’s profile for talking points.By using Topics within Sheets, you create a decentralized, scalable system of interconnected flows that talk to each other.Why This Matters for Business (The ROI)This isn’t just “tech for the sake of tech.” The business value lies in Extreme Scalability and Ease of Adaptation.KPI: Scalability. You move from processing small to large amounts of data without changing your core logic.KPI: Reduced Technical Debt. Business users can modify the “Subscribers” (the flows) without needing a DevOps team to rebuild the entire architecture.KPI: Time-to-Market. You can deploy a complex, multi-step agentic process in hours rather than weeks of custom development.The Human Element: User-Driven InputsThe beauty of using Sheets as the backbone is the UI. By adding a simple Apps Script-based sidebar or a structured input sheet, you give non-technical team members a “Command Center.” They drop in a list of items, hit “Process,” and watch the “Sheet-as-a-Queue” engine handle the heavy lifting across multiple agentic workflows.Final ThoughtsThe jump from “cool tool” to “business-impactful system” happens when we stop looking at Workspace Studio for standalone productivity and start treating it as a component in a larger, scalable approach.Important note: Workspace Studio enforces several operational limits to ensure system stability and fair usage across users. These quotas are primarily categorized into flow creation, execution frequency, and structural complexity. Take this into consideration when designing and scaling flows. Google Cloud Platform will provide a solid foundation to expand and grow beyond these limitations.References:Learn about Google Workspace Studio limitsGet started: Workspace Studio set up guide for adminsScaling Workspace Studio: Breaking the “Out-of-the-Box” Barrier with Smart Queuing was originally published in Google Cloud - Community on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.