Contacts in Google Workspace: Tips for Users, Admins & Organizations

Vincent Scott Vincent Scott6 January 202513 Minutes0 Comments

Managing contacts effectively in Google Workspace is essential for streamlined collaboration, efficient communication, and operational success. Whether you’re a team member, an IT admin, or an organization transitioning from another platform like Microsoft 365, Apple iCloud, or Zoho Mail, having a solid contact management strategy is key to unlocking the full potential of your Google environment.

In this guide, we’ll walk you through the basics and best practices of Google Workspace contact management.

What is Google Contacts?

Google Contacts is the address book for Google Workspace. It allows users to create, store, organize, and manage personal and professional contact information. Integrated with Gmail, Calendar, Meet, and other Workspace tools, Google Contacts powers autocomplete features and enables fast, consistent communication. Google Contacts is cross-platform, which means that it can be synchronized with nearly every app or device: iPhones, Android Phones, Windows Phones native apps, WhatsApp, Slack, or your favorite CRM. This extreme interoperability makes it the first choice for your single source of trust for storing contacts. For instance, if you synchronize your iPhone and your CRM with Google Contacts, then you will have your CRM contacts in your native iPhone contacts app. In your Google Contacts interface, you will find two types of contacts:

  • Personal Contacts: Managed by individual users

  • Directory Contacts: Managed by admins, typically visible organization-wide

Both Personal and Directory contacts appear in autocomplete when a user of your domain wants to send an email, share a document, or make an appointment.

What information can we store in a Google Contact?

Google Contacts is more than just a digital phonebook. It’s a powerful tool that lets you keep track of essential details about the people you communicate with—whether for work, family, or networking. The following are the types of information you can store in a Google Contact.

Basic Contact Information

Each Google Contact can store the person’s full name, including prefixes (like Dr. or Mr.), suffixes (like Jr. or III), and even phonetic spelling for accurate pronunciation. You can also add nicknames or alternative names for easier recognition.

Phone Numbers and Emails

You can store multiple phone numbers per contact—mobile, work, home, fax, or even custom labels. The same applies to email addresses, which you can tag as work, personal, or any custom label that helps you stay organized.

Professional Details

Google Contacts is business-friendly. You can enter a contact’s company namejob title, and department. This helps maintain context when reaching out to clients, vendors, or coworkers.

You can also include the name of their manager or assistant under the ‘Related Person’ field. This field can be customized to display other types of relationships as well, such as family members or any connections relevant to the user’s needs

Addresses

Need to store mailing addresses? Google Contacts allows multiple address entries (work, home, or other), including fields for street, city, state, zip code, and country. These are useful not just for logistics but also for syncing with map apps or autofill services.

Online and Social Profiles

Modern contact management includes online presence. You can add website URLs, links to social profiles (LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, etc.), and Google Chat handles. These fields help centralize communication options beyond just email or phone.

Dates and Events

Keep track of important dates such as birthdays and anniversaries. You can also add custom events, like the date you met someone or their company’s founding date—useful for relationship-building and reminders.

Notes and Custom Fields

Google Contact notes allow you to store important context, such as how you met someone, their preferences, or follow-up reminders—helpful for building stronger relationships. Custom fields let you go beyond the default options by adding personalized data like customer IDs, internal tags, or onboarding dates. These features are especially useful for businesses that need to track specific details not covered by standard contact fields.

Additionally, when you include a link in the notes, it becomes clickable, allowing easy access to websites or even Google Docs, Sheets, or Drive files. This feature is especially valuable for collaboration within the organization.

Visual and Organizational Tools

You can assign a profile photo to each contact for quick recognition and organize contacts into labels or groups like “Team,” “Clients,” or “Vendors.” These groups make it easy to filter, share, or email segments of your contact base.

What are directory contacts?

Directory contacts are contacts from the domain directory that are managed by the Google Workspace domain administrator through the admin console or a third-party app. They are populated automatically for all users unless the admin hides them.

Users cannot update the contact information of the directory contacts (except for their own), but can add some details, visible and editable by themselves only.

 

Comparison between Directory Contacts and Personal Contacts

Feature Directory Contacts Personal Contacts (My Contacts)
Who manages them Google Workspace admin The user
How they are added Automatically populated from the domain directory Manually added by the user or synced from connected accounts
Who can see them All users in the organization (unless hidden by the admin) Only visible to the user who created them
Can users edit them? No (except their own directory profile) Yes
Can users add extra info? Yes, but it’s only visible/editable by the user Yes, fully editable

The directory section is accessible through the Google Contacts interface (https://contacts.google.com) and can also be disabled by the admin.

When opening a directory contact, we can see their hierarchical position in the organisation.

The directory contacts appear everywhere in Google Workspace as normal contacts do.

Directory profile: Visible to anyone

The directory profile of a user contains some public information (like the picture, the email, and the name), which means that if someone outside the organisation receives an email from a user, then the picture and name of that user will be shown

Users can change their basic directory profile information in their Google account management page (https://account.google.com) unless the admin has disabled the feature.

How Google Contacts helps Google users

Autocomplete: The cornerstone of Google Workspace

Whenever you need to share a document, send an email, or invite someone to a meeting, the field where you enter the name of the person you want to email, invite, or share a document with will appear after you type a few letters of their name or email, provided this person is in your Google Contacts list.

Know who you deal with: Google Contacts Contextual help

Wherever you are in Google Workspace, you can access or update the contact details of the people that are mentioned in your documents, emails, or calendar invite.

Contact bubble: Contact information in Gmail, Calendar, and Drive

In Gmail, when you hover your mouse over the name of the sender or another recipient, a contextual window appears displaying the contact’s details along with quick actions like “Edit,” “Invite to an event,” “Start Google Meet,” or “Chat.”

You can do the same in Google Calendar by hovering over a guest’s name;

or in Google Drive sharing popup by hovering a collaborator.

Sidebar Addon: An embedded Google Contacts manager on all your apps

When you are on Gmail, Calendar, or Drive, click the contact icon to open the sidebar Addon.

Then, you will see the list of all the people involved in the document or email you selected.  You can also search for other contacts or create a new one.

As you click a contact, you will see the extensive contact card, where you can edit the contact or move them to another contact list.

Find contacts in Gmail Search

When you search by name or email in Gmail Search, the main contact information of the person will be displayed at the top of the list. The list itself will contain all the emails, sent or received by that person.

Drive & Docs Mention

If you type an @ in a document or spreadsheet, an autocomplete will appear. Choose a contact by pressing enter.

Now, hovering this contact in this document will show their contact information.

Google Contacts : The Universal Protocol for Mobile Synchronization

Accessing your professional contacts on your mobile devices is a must if you’re using Google Workspace.

Once you added your Google Workspace account to your phone and enabled contacts synchronization, your Google Contacts will appear in your native mobile contacts application.

So whenever you add or edit a contact on your phone, it will be updated automatically into Google contacts and vice-versa.

See How to synchronize your iPhone with Google Contacts.


How to Share Google Contacts

As we can see in the previous scenarios, Google has made a great effort to make contacts ubiquitous so that we can use or manipulate them when we need them.

However, Google will show you only your own contacts, as Google does not offer to synchronize contacts between users.

You can therefore install a free tool like Shared Contacts Manager to allow you and your colleagues to have a centralized, shared contacts database accessible from your devices and your Google tools:

For this, it is extremely simple :

  • Log on Shared Contacts Manager Marketplace App with an Administrator account
  • Click on “Admin Install”
  • Authorize the app to be integrated with your Google Workspace
  • Create a contact list if you don’t already have one
  • Share the contact list with the users of your choice
  • Give them “Can Edit” permission if you want to have access to their contacts too.
  • Invite everyone in the team to add the contact they want to share into that list (from Google Contacts directly or through the application)

Now, everyone in the team will have free access to the common base of shared contacts in their mobile, Gmail autocomplete, search, bubble, sidebar addon etc.