How to Get Started with AWS's Latest AI Agents: Amazon Quick and Amazon Connect (May 2026 Update)
Introduction
In late April 2026, AWS CEO Matt Garman and OpenAI leaders unveiled a wave of agentic AI tools designed to transform how businesses operate. While strolling through ancient abbey ruins in York, I was reminded that some things remain unchanged for centuries—but in tech, a single week can rewrite the rulebook. Amazon Quick, an AI assistant for work, now offers a desktop app, visual content generation, and custom app building—all without needing an AWS account. Amazon Connect has expanded into four specialized AI solutions: Decisions (supply chain), Talent (hiring), and Customer (service). This guide walks you through setting up and using these tools to streamline your workflows.

What You Need
- A personal email address or existing accounts from Google, Apple, GitHub, or Amazon (no AWS account required for Quick).
- Internet connection for sign-up, app downloads, and integrations.
- Access to work apps you want to connect (Google Workspace, Zoom, Airtable, Dropbox, Microsoft Teams, etc.).
- For Amazon Connect solutions: a business context (e.g., supply chain data, hiring needs, or customer service workflows) and an AWS account (for some features).
- A modern browser (Chrome, Edge, Firefox) or the Quick desktop app (Windows/Mac).
Step-by-Step Guide
Step 1: Sign Up for Amazon Quick and Install the Desktop App
Begin by visiting the Amazon Quick sign-up page. You can register using any personal email or link your Google, Apple, GitHub, or Amazon account in minutes—no AWS account necessary. After registration, download the Quick desktop app (Preview) from the dashboard. This app keeps you connected to local files, calendar, and communications without relying on a browser. Install it on your Windows or macOS machine and log in with your new credentials.
Step 2: Connect Your Work Apps to Quick
Quick’s power comes from integrations. From the settings panel, select “Integrations” and authorize access to the services you use daily: Google Workspace, Zoom, Airtable, Dropbox, and Microsoft Teams. For each app, follow the OAuth flow—grant permissions so Quick can learn your data, schedule, and communication patterns. Once connected, Quick will surface relevant information and suggest actions based on your context.
Step 3: Generate Documents, Presentations, Infographics, and Images
With integrations active, interact with Quick via natural language chat. To create a polished report, type: “Generate a quarterly review document with sales data from my Airtable.” Quick will pull data, format it, and deliver a downloadable file. For visuals, say: “Create an infographic summarizing our Q1 marketing milestones” or “Generate an image of a futuristic office.” Quick uses AI to produce high-quality assets directly in chat. You can then refine with follow-up commands.
Step 4: Build Custom AI Apps with Quick (Preview)
Quick now supports building custom intelligent apps using natural language. From the “Build” tab, describe your desired application—for example, “Create a dashboard that tracks real-time inventory levels from my Dropbox CSV.” Quick’s AI will generate the app, dashboard, or even a full web page, all connected to your business data. Test it, tweak the description, and deploy with one click. No coding required.

Step 5: Explore Amazon Connect’s New Agentic AI Solutions
If you’re managing supply chain, hiring, or customer service, dive into Amazon Connect’s expanded suite:
- Amazon Connect Decisions: For supply chain planning, connect your operational data sources. The solution combines Amazon’s 30 years of logistics science with 25+ specialized tools to shift from crisis management to proactive scenario planning. Set it up via AWS Console.
- Amazon Connect Talent (Preview): For scaled hiring, configure AI-led interviews and assessments. Upload job descriptions and candidate pools; Talent automates screening and evaluation.
- Amazon Connect Customer: Previously just Amazon Connect, now enhanced with new configuration options for personalized voice, chat, and digital experiences. Configure through the existing Connect admin panel.
Each solution can work independently or together. Start with a pilot project matching your most pressing need.
Tips for Success
- Start small: With Quick, test one integration (e.g., Google Workspace) before connecting all apps to avoid information overload.
- Leverage custom app building: Use it for repetitive tasks, like generating weekly status reports or a client project tracker. The natural language interface makes iteration fast.
- For supply chain (Decisions): Feed in historical data and demand forecasts first; the system learns best with clean, consistent inputs.
- For hiring (Talent): Define clear success criteria before turning on AI interviews—bias mitigation is built in, but reviews are essential.
- Monitor costs: Quick’s new pricing plans include free and paid tiers; check usage regularly to avoid surprises.
- Stay informed: AWS weekly roundups (like this one) often include further optimizations. Bookmark the AWS Blog for updates.
These tools are designed to handle routine work, freeing you for higher-level decisions. Whether you’re crafting presentations with Quick or automating supply chain planning with Connect, the key is to start exploring—the AI adapts to your workflow, not the other way around.
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