
Picture your revenue ops lead on a Monday morning. She opens a quarterly report in Google Sheets and realizes she needs ten new metric columns between every major section: new CAC, LTV bands, lead sources by segment, experiment tags. She knows the mechanics—highlight columns, right‑click, insert—but repeating that dance across dozens of tabs steals an hour she doesn’t have.
Knowing how to insert multiple columns efficiently is more than a spreadsheet trick; it’s how you keep dashboards adaptable as your business questions evolve. When you can reshape a sheet in seconds—via shortcuts, menu options, or templates—you avoid the silent tax of “I’ll fix the structure later,” which usually means never.
Now layer on an AI computer agent. Instead of you hunting through columns, the agent can read your sheet, understand where new fields belong, and apply the exact insert pattern across every tab and file. You stay focused on which metrics matter; the agent handles where they live.
Before you automate, you need to master the basics. These are reliable, repeatable methods your AI agent will eventually mimic.
Google’s official guide to this behavior: Add or move columns & cells.
Best for: Visual thinkers, one‑off edits on small sheets.
Limitations: Slow and error‑prone on many tabs or workbooks.
Best for: Users who prefer menu navigation and want predictable behavior.
From the LiveFlow tutorial and Google help:
Alternative menu‑access shortcut (Chrome):
Best for: Analysts, operators, and founders who live in Sheets all day.
Limitations: Team‑wide adoption is hard; easy to forget combos.
If you need many empty columns or rows at the edge of your sheet:
Official reference for related resizing and structure changes: Add or move columns & cells.
Best for: Agencies and sales teams that repeat similar reports for many clients.
Once you’re beyond a handful of sheets, manual edits become a drag. No‑code tools and add‑ons can standardize how columns get inserted.
Many Sheets add‑ons (including some finance and data tools) wrap small Google Apps Script snippets behind a button.
A typical pattern:
Revenue, Leads, Spend).This gives you one‑click repeatability—especially useful when you onboard a new client and need the same report skeleton every time.
Tools like LiveFlow provide templates that already rely on precise column layouts. When you create a new report:
Reference tutorial on multi‑column insertion from a finance‑workflow angle: LiveFlow’s guide on inserting multiple columns in Google Sheets.
Superjoin shows another pattern: turning text instructions into Sheet changes.
Workflow:
“Add three columns between B and C on every tab named ‘Client *’.”
Full tutorial: How to Add Columns in Google Sheets | Superjoin.
Pros:
Cons:
Manual and no‑code methods work inside a single file. Simular’s AI computer agent goes further: it behaves like a power user who can navigate your entire desktop, browser, and cloud stack.
Imagine your agency maintains one Google Sheets report per client—dozens of files, each needing two new attribution columns across several tabs.
With Simular Pro:
Pros:
Cons:
You can also embed column insertion inside a bigger pipeline:
SQL Flag, Campaign Tag, Owner Region).Here, inserting columns isn’t a separate task; it’s a step inside an automated pipeline with thousands of actions. Simular’s webhook integration lets you trigger this from your existing production systems.
For agencies or B2B marketers who run similar campaigns each quarter:
Pros:
Cons:
By combining the manual knowledge of Google Sheets, lightweight no‑code tools, and a robust AI computer agent like Simular, you turn “insert multiple columns” from a tiny, nagging chore into a fully automated, scalable capability in your operations.
If you’re working inside a single Google Sheets file, the fastest native way to add many columns is to use multi‑selection with either right‑click or keyboard shortcuts.
Here’s a reliable pattern:
If you prefer the keyboard:
Google documents these behaviors in detail at: https://support.google.com/docs/answer/54813.
Google Sheets doesn’t yet have a built‑in “insert on all tabs” button, but you can still move fast with a structured approach.
Manual approach:
For more complex cases (different positions per tab or many workbooks), consider defining a simple process for an AI agent like Simular: it can open each tab, follow your rule (e.g., “insert a column after ‘Revenue’”), and repeat this multi‑step pattern consistently across the file.
Official multi‑sheet editing behaviors are covered in Google’s help center: https://support.google.com/docs/answer/54813.
Inserting multiple columns carelessly can shift ranges and break formulas, especially in revenue, funnel, or cohort reports.
To minimize risk:
=SUM(B2:B100), define a range like Leads and use =SUM(Leads). When you insert columns, named ranges tend to update more gracefully.Always keep a backup or version history snapshot via File → Version history before large structural changes.
Yes. You can automate column insertion in Google Sheets with zero traditional coding by combining built‑in features, add‑ons, and AI computer agents.
Practical no‑code options:
These options let business owners, agencies, and marketers standardize structure without learning scripts. Start with templates, then graduate to add‑ons and AI agents as you need scale.
Simular’s AI computer agents are designed to behave like highly reliable power users who never get tired of repetitive Google Sheets work. Instead of writing fragile scripts, you record or define the exact workflow once and then delegate it.
For column insertion, a typical Simular workflow looks like this:
This turns what used to be an hour of repetitive column manipulation into a background task, freeing sales, marketing, and ops teams to focus on strategy instead of spreadsheet mechanics.