Speed Up Routine Email with Gmail's Smart Compose and Help Me Write
For Freight Brokers ·
What This Does
Gmail predicts what you are about to type and offers to finish the sentence for you. It also drafts full replies from a one-line description and suggests short responses you can send with a single click. Together, these features cut the time spent on routine correspondence, the follow-ups, confirmations, and status updates that fill most inboxes. You still control every word that goes out.
Gmail's Smart Compose predicts and auto-completes your sentences as you type, and Smart Reply suggests short reply options for incoming emails. Together they cut the time you spend on routine carrier and shipper emails by completing your words for you.
Before You Start
- You use Gmail for work email, either a personal account or through Google Workspace
- You can log in at mail.google.com or through the Gmail app
- Smart Compose is turned on in Settings (it is usually on by default, and Step 1 shows you where to check)
- If your organization runs Google Workspace instead of free Gmail, the {{tool:Google Workspace.plan}} plan starts at {{tool:Google Workspace.price}} and includes the same AI features
Steps
1. Turn on Smart Compose and Smart Reply
Click the gear icon in the top right of Gmail, then "See all settings." On the General tab, scroll to Smart Compose and select "Writing suggestions on." While you are there, turn on Smart Reply too, then scroll down and click Save Changes. Both stay on until you turn them off, so this is a one-time step.
2. Accept suggestions as you type
Start composing or replying to a message. As you write, Gmail predicts the rest of your sentence and shows it in light gray text just ahead of your cursor. Press Tab to accept the full suggestion, or the right arrow key to take it one word at a time. Keep typing if a suggestion is wrong. It disappears without interrupting you, and the more you write in Gmail, the more it adapts to your specific phrases and the people you write to most.
3. Use Smart Reply for one-line responses
Open a message that only needs a quick acknowledgment. Near the bottom of the email you will see two or three suggested replies, things like "Thanks, got it" or "I will look into this." Click one to load it into the compose window, add any specific detail, and send. Save this option for simple acknowledgments. Skip it for anything that needs nuance or a real decision.
4. Draft full emails with Help Me Write
For longer or more complex replies, open a new compose window or click Reply, then look for the pencil or star icon near the bottom of the compose box. Click it and describe what the email should say: who it is for, what happened, and the tone you want. Click Create. Gmail generates a full draft directly in the compose window.
If the icon does not appear, your Gmail version or Workspace plan may not include Help Me Write yet. Draft the email in a chatbot instead and paste the result into Gmail.
5. Refine the draft, then send
Read the draft against what you actually know about the situation before it goes anywhere. If the tone or length is off, use the Refine option and add an instruction such as "make it shorter" or "sound more formal." Once it reads right, fill in any names, dates, or numbers the AI could not have known, then send.
6. Save your best replies as templates
For messages you send over and over, turn a strong draft into a reusable template. Go to Settings → Advanced, enable Templates, and save. Then, in any compose window, click the three-dot menu, choose Templates, and save the draft under a name you will recognize later. Pull it up the next time a similar message lands and edit only what changed.
Example
A carrier just emailed you: "Is the Chicago load still available?" You need to reply with the load details and ask if they can run it. Smart Reply suggests: "Yes, it's still available." Click it, then in the body of your reply, start typing the details. As you type "pickup is Monday at 7am," Smart Compose may auto-complete "from Chicago Distribution Center." Press Tab to accept.
You get a faster reply that you built partly by pressing Tab, feels minor until you've done it 80 times in a day.
A good first test: pick the next three routine replies you send, accept the Smart Compose suggestion whenever it matches your intent, and count how many sentences you never had to type.
Caveats
Whatever your field, treat the suggestions as speed rather than judgment. Gmail echoes common phrasing instead of checking facts, so read every draft once before sending anything that contains names, numbers, dates, or commitments.