Productivity software is crowding with AI-native alternatives, and Zoom is now positioning itself as a direct competitor to established office suites rather than just a video conferencing tool.
The company announced a broad expansion of its AI product lineup, with the most anticipated item being its AI-powered avatars, which will become available later this month. First announced last year, the avatars are photorealistic digital representations that mimic a user’s appearance, expressions, and lip and eye movements. According to the announcement, they are designed for situations where a user is not “camera-ready” and will function in both live meetings and Zoom‘s asynchronous video messaging product.
Alongside the avatars, the company is introducing deepfake detection technology embedded directly into meetings, intended to alert participants of possible audio or video impersonation — a notable pairing given that the avatars themselves rely on similar synthesis techniques.
A Suite to Compete
The more structurally significant announcement is Zoom‘s entry into office productivity software. The company is launching AI Docs, Slides, and Sheets apps, which can generate document drafts, data-populated spreadsheets, and presentations by drawing on meeting transcripts and data from connected services. These apps are expected to enter preview in spring. The move puts Zoom in direct competition with players ranging from legacy productivity vendors to newer entrants such as Canva and startup Context, as well as Salesforce-owned Slack, which has been expanding its own AI capabilities.
AI Companion 3.0 is also arriving on the desktop app, having first launched on the web in September. The company says monthly active users of AI Companion more than tripled in Q4 FY 2026 year-over-year. The assistant integrates with Slack, Salesforce, ServiceNow, Gmail, Outlook, Asana, and Jira, allowing users to query across multiple knowledge bases from a single interface. Workvivo, Zoom‘s employee communication app, will receive the same assistant.
Agents and Infrastructure
For users without technical backgrounds, the company is introducing an AI agent builder that operates through natural language prompts, allowing the creation of custom agents that can be invoked directly in chat to execute tasks. For developers, Zoom is opening speech, vision, and language intelligence APIs deployable either on-premises or in the cloud.
The company also says it plans to unify design across desktop, mobile, and web surfaces to consolidate access to tools such as notes, meeting questions, and transcriptions. AI-driven summarization is being added to the chat experience to surface key thread insights automatically.
Taken together, the moves signal that Zoom is pursuing a wider share of the enterprise software stack — extending well beyond its original meeting infrastructure into the documents, workflows, and communication layers that organizations rely on daily.
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