How to Connect Hermes Agent to Google Forms and Stop Checking for Responses Manually
Form responses should come to you, not the other way around.
If your agent can write prose but still can’t check form responses without opening every spreadsheet, it’s only helping with the parts of work that don’t actually move anything forward.
Form responses should come to you, not the other way around. But connecting an AI agent to Google Forms the manual way means wading through OAuth setup, token refresh logic, API quirks, and error handling — infrastructure work that has nothing to do with your actual job.
That’s where ClawLink comes in. With ClawLink, you can connect Hermes to Google Forms in minutes, without building or maintaining any of the integration plumbing yourself.
Why connect Hermes to Google Forms?
Once Google Forms is connected, your agent can:
- list form responses and summaries from chat
- get notified about new submissions
- aggregate response data without opening the linked sheet
- create new forms from chat
- export response data for analysis
That turns your agent from a disconnected chat tool into something that actually participates in how you work.
The usual problem
Connecting an AI agent to Google Forms sounds straightforward. In practice, you usually end up responsible for:
- Google OAuth and Forms API scope setup
- refresh token handling
- secure credential storage
- Form-to-Sheet linking quirks
- API limitations for response data
If your goal is just “I want Hermes to help me with forms,” then building all of that is an expensive detour in disguise.
The easier way: use ClawLink
ClawLink is a third-party integration hub for Hermes. It gives your agent access to 100+ apps, including Google Forms, without forcing you to build and maintain every layer of the integration stack yourself.
What ClawLink handles
- hosted connection flow
- credential storage
- provider auth maintenance
- request execution
- logs and reliability
What you do
- install the plugin
- pair Hermes with ClawLink
- connect Google Forms
- start using it from chat
Nice and boring. As it should be.
Step 1: Install the ClawLink plugin
Install the plugin in Hermes:
hermes plugins install claw-link/hermes-plugin --enable
hermes clawlink setupOr follow the Hermes-specific setup instructions at:
- Website: https://claw-link.dev
- Docs: https://docs.claw-link.dev/hermes
- Verification: https://claw-link.dev/verify
- Source: https://github.com/hith3sh/clawlink
Step 2: Pair ClawLink with Hermes
After installing, ask Hermes to set up or pair ClawLink.
This launches the browser-based approval flow so your Hermes instance can securely connect to your ClawLink account.
If the plugin was just installed and the tools are not visible yet, restart Hermes Agent and retry.
Step 3: Connect Google Forms in the ClawLink dashboard
Open the ClawLink dashboard and connect Google Forms.
Approve access in the browser, and let ClawLink handle the underlying complexity. That means you don’t need to manually manage:
- Forms auth details
- token refresh behavior
- credential storage
- API glue code
You connect once and get on with your day.
Step 4: Use Google Forms from Hermes chat
Once connected, you can start asking Hermes to help with forms tasks in plain language.
Example prompts
- “list form responses and summaries from chat”
- “get notified about new submissions”
- “aggregate response data without opening the linked sheet”
- “create new forms from chat”
That’s the actual benefit: not more infrastructure, just less friction.
Why this is better than rolling your own
Could you build the Google Forms integration yourself? Sure. Should you, if your actual goal is just to make Hermes useful? Usually not.
1. Faster time to value
You can get from zero to useful much faster than building custom integration plumbing.
2. Less maintenance debt
You don’t become the person responsible for auth edge cases forever.
3. Better UX
The connection happens in the browser, which is where users already expect app approvals to happen.
4. Hermes-first experience
ClawLink is designed around the idea that external tools should make Hermes better — not create another engineering side project.