I think you are conflating two pathways, and you have some errors in terminology that you should sort through. Glycogenolysis starts with glycogen and produces glucose 1-phosphate, which can be converted into glucose 6-phosphate. Glc 6-P has multiple fates that depend on the tissue. For simplicity, we might focus only on the conversion of Glc 6-P to glucose, which is a major fate in liver. Gluconeogenesis usually refers the pathway that starts with pyruvate and ends with glucose, although there are other compounds that can funnel into gluconeogenesis, usually via oxaloacetate. The last step in gluconeogenesis is the conversion of glucose 6-P to glucose, catalyzed by glucose 6-phosphatase. I am not sure what you mean by the activation of glucose.