Canva has 260 million monthly users and $3.5 billion in annual revenue. For most of its eleven-year history, it has been categorised as a design tool. Todayβs launch makes that categorisation harder to defend.
At its Create event in Los Angeles, the company unveiled Canva AI 2.0. Alongside conversational design and AI-generated templates, the update introduces recurring background task scheduling, connectors into Slack, Gmail, Google Drive, Zoom, and Google Calendar, and an orchestration layer that runs workflows while users are offline. These are not design features but the building blocks of a workflow automation platform.
CEO and co-founder Melanie Perkins set out the problem Canva AI 2.0 is designed to solve ahead of todayβs launch:
βYou generate something in one tool, format it in another, collaborate in a third, and publish through a fourth. Context gets lost between tabs, your brand guidelines live somewhere else entirely, and every extra step slows things down.β
What the scheduling feature actually does
The most operationally significant addition is background task scheduling. Users can set recurring tasks that run automatically: generating batched social content on a fixed schedule, scanning emails each morning and producing meeting briefing documents from calendar data, or running web research and populating reports before anyone has logged in.
That puts Canva in direct competition with tools like Zapier and elements of Microsoft Power Automate. One constraint worth noting for IT teams evaluating it: the scheduling feature only produces drafts for human review. Nothing publishes automatically.
As UC Today has reported on the broader agentic shift, the gap between tools that assist a person inside a workflow and tools that execute the workflow itself is where enterprise buying decisions are increasingly being made. Canvaβs scheduling layer sits firmly in the second category.
Connectors and the fragmentation problem
The Connectors feature draws on Slack, Gmail, Google Drive, Zoom, Notion, and Google Calendar when generating content β pulling conversations, files, and meeting data into a single execution layer. The stated use cases include generating meeting summaries from Zoom transcripts, turning customer emails into sales documents, and building internal newsletters from Slack activity.
EY research found that 78% of sellers missed their targets in 2025, with a significant portion of working time lost to navigating disconnected systems rather than engaging customers. Canvaβs answer is consolidation rather than a new data layer.
The risk, as UC Todayβs analysis of agent interoperability found last month, is that AI agents tend not to fail inside individual platforms β they fail between them, where context breaks down. Whether Canva can maintain coherence across half a dozen connectors at enterprise scale is the question IT teams will want answered before committing.
What the acquisitions tell you
Todayβs launch follows a run of acquisitions that clarify the strategic direction. Canva recently acquired Simtheory, an AI collaboration and agent management platform, and Ortto, a customer data and marketing automation company used by more than 11,000 customers in 190 countries, which combines a customer data platform with marketing automation across email, SMS, push notifications, in-app messaging, forms, and surveys.
COO Cliff Obrecht described the intent when announcing the deals: βSimtheory accelerates our evolution from a design platform with AI tools to an AI platform with design and productivity tools at its core.β
Earlier in Q1, Canva acquired MangoAI, which brought closed-loop reinforcement learning that evolves video ad creatives automatically based on live performance signals. Taken together, the acquisitions point toward a platform that closes the loop between content creation, deployment, and performance measurement β territory currently occupied by marketing operations stacks from Salesforce and HubSpot.
Where Canva sits in the enterprise market
Canvaβs enterprise business is growing at 100% year-on-year. The company reported $4 billion in ARR in February 2026, with its B2B segment estimated at around $500 million. An IPO remains anticipated but unconfirmed.
That growth sits against a market backdrop where, as Gartner data tracked by UC Today shows, 40% of enterprise applications are expected to feature task-specific AI agents by end of 2026. Canva is positioning for a share of that market from the creative surface outward, rather than from data infrastructure inward. On the competitive side, a Morgan Stanley report last September downgraded Adobeβs stock, citing AI offerings that had failed to keep pace with rivals including Canva.
The governance question
Canva has been deploying agentic AI internally with a target of saving 30,000 work hours, with its entire workforce completing a dedicated week of AI experimentation. That gives the product some credibility as a tool tested against real operational constraints rather than just demo conditions.
Security and compliance teams, however, will have their own questions. As UC Today has reported on enterprise AI security, connecting AI tooling to email, calendar, and messaging systems shifts the risk profile β the concern is no longer just what employees are typing into AI tools, but what connected systems can access and trigger on their own. Canvaβs draft-only guardrail on scheduling helps, but it does not address data access scope across connectors.
The Anthropic integration
Canva also announced today that it has deepened its partnership with Anthropic, bringing Canvaβs Design Engine directly into Claude. Users can take outputs from Claude and pull them into Canva as editable designs, publishable as websites. The move extends existing Claude MCP functionality that UC Today covered in February, which already allowed Claude to open Canva as an interactive app inside chat. The same integration exists with ChatGPT, positioning Canva as a design execution layer across AI platforms rather than a destination competing with them.
Perkins framed the bigger picture in her pre-launch post: βWe believe the next era of creation will be a world where ideas move from concept to finished work in a single, seamless flow, with your team, your context, and your brand built in from the very start.β
The research preview of Canva AI 2.0 begins today, rolling out to the first one million users before a broader release over the coming weeks.