Most quotes die in email drafts and half finished spreadsheets. A customizable quote template in Google Sheets pulls all the chaos into one living document: product lines, currencies, discounts, taxes, and client details in clean columns that anyone on your team can understand. Built in formulas handle totals and tax, while conditional formatting flags errors before they embarrass you in front of a client. Because it is cloud based, sales, ops, and finance can all refine the same structure instead of cloning new files for every deal. When you hand that template to an AI computer agent, the real leverage begins. Instead of copy pasting names and line items, your agent can read requests from email or a CRM, duplicate the template sheet, populate every field, double check math, export a PDF, and send a polished proposal in minutes. That turns quoting from a time sink into a repeatable, scalable workflow you barely touch.
Before you automate anything, you need a solid base template.
Master Quote Template.=ROUND((Quantity * Unit_price) * (1 - Discount) * (1 + Tax_rate), 2)Pros (manual): Full control, easy to tweak on the fly, no setup beyond Sheets.
Cons: Error prone, slow at volume, depends on careful humans every time.
Once the basics work, you can strip out some repetition without yet using an AI agent.
This already saves minutes per quote and reduces typing errors, but it still expects a human to know which client, which products, and what discounts to apply.
Pros (semi automated): Faster, fewer typos, still transparent and editable.
Cons: You are still the operator; scripts cannot reason about edge cases or negotiate pricing.
Now imagine your quote template is a checklist your Simular AI agent follows on your behalf.
You configure a Simular Pro computer use agent with access to your browser, Google Sheets, and email. Then you describe the workflow in plain language, for example:
Because Simular agents operate like a careful human, every step is visible and replayable. You can watch runs, inspect which cells were edited, and adjust your instructions if you want to change pricing logic or formatting.
Pros (AI agent at scale): Massive time savings, consistent formatting, fewer mistakes, and true end-to-end automation from request to ready-to-send quote. Frees sales teams to focus on conversations, not spreadsheets.
Cons: Requires an initial investment of time to define your rules, test edge cases, and decide which steps the agent can fully automate versus where you still want human approval.
If you only send a few quotes a month, a well-built manual template in Google Sheets may be enough. As volume grows, semi-automated scripts smooth the rough edges. When quoting becomes a daily grind or you have multiple reps sending similar proposals, delegating the flow to a Simular AI computer agent turns quoting into an invisible background process.
The sweet spot for most agencies, service businesses, and SaaS teams is a hybrid: the agent prepares quotes end-to-end, and humans simply review and approve. Your template becomes a living spec for how your business prices work, and the agent handles the clicks.
Start from a clean sheet and reserve the top rows for quote metadata: quote number, date, client name, validity, and terms. Below, build a table with headers for description, quantity, unit price, discount, tax, and line total. Apply bold fonts to headers, currency formatting to price columns, and borders around the table. Add your logo with Insert image. Finish by freezing header rows so long quotes stay readable.
In your line total column, use a formula such as =(B5*C5)*(1 D5)*(1 E5) where B is quantity, C is unit price, D is discount, and E is tax rate. At the bottom of the table, sum all line totals with =SUM(F5:F50) for a subtotal. If you handle multiple tax types, create separate columns and sum each, then compute a grand total. Protect formula cells so users cannot overwrite them accidentally.
Design a single master template. Insert your logo at the top and use custom brand colors for headers and totals via the Fill color and Text color menus. Choose one or two fonts and apply them consistently through Format theme. Create cell styles for headings, line items, and totals so future edits stay on brand. When you duplicate the template for each quote, all branding carries over automatically.
Always duplicate the template tab instead of editing the master. Use data validation on key fields like tax rate and currency to restrict inputs. Add conditional formatting that highlights blanks in required columns or negative totals. Protect ranges that contain formulas or structural labels. Finally, create a short checklist in a side panel of the sheet so team members review client name, dates, totals, and terms before sending.
First, standardize your Google Sheets template with clear headers and stable formulas. Then configure an AI computer agent to open the sheet, duplicate the template, and fill client details and items based on data from your CRM or emails. Ask it to export a PDF and draft an email automatically. Start in review mode so you approve quotes before sending, then gradually allow full automation once results match your manual work.