From talk to task · A meeting tool that finishes the meeting

The meeting
is over.
The follow-up
isn't.

Drop the recording in. Walk away. Come back to the recap you wish someone had written for you — every meeting, every time.

Ready in under 10 minutes · No new habit to build · Works with Teams · Zoom · Meet
Built around the meetings teams actually run
The cost of a forgotten meeting

The recap is the work.
It just never gets done.

The call ends. Six people had it. Three of them remember it. One of them writes notes — eventually. By Thursday, the action items are vibes. By next month, the decision is a debate.

6h
/ person / week
Time spent re-deriving what was decided in meetings nobody wrote down.
~40%
Action items lost
Estimated share of follow-ups that never make it into a tracker after the call ends.
3 wks
Average half-life
Time before "what did we decide?" becomes a debate that nobody can settle from memory.
0
Tools to open mid-call
notologic doesn't need to be in the meeting. It uses the recording your call already made.
How it works

Three steps.
From talk to task.

No new habit. No extra tool to open mid-meeting. Use the recording or the transcript your call already produced — the clean report comes out the other side.

01 ⁄

Drop in the meeting.

Close Teams. Open notologic. Drag the recording in. Walk away to grab a coffee — by the time you're back, the report is waiting.

Add context if you have it: agenda, chat log, prior notes. We use them to write a sharper recap — none of them are required.

A normal Tuesday · 11:00 AM
acme-onboarding-kickoff.m4a
47:12 · 38.2 MB · uploaded by Mara
Browse files
Uploaded Transcribed Analyzing Ready
02 ⁄

Get the follow-up you'd have written yourself.

Roughly the time it takes to grab a coffee. Same sections in the same places, so your team always knows where to look — and every fact points back to the moment it was said.

Inside the report: exec summary, decisions, action items with owners, risks, open questions, next steps, who spoke, glossary.

11:08 AM · The report is waiting
Meeting · MTG_acme-onboardingREADY
ACME Onboarding — Kickoff
2026·05·23 · 47 min · 6 participants
DEC-01Adopt phased pilot, two regionsDECIDED
AI-01Send security questionnaireHIGH
AI-02Draft pilot scope & criteriaHIGH
RISK-01Region B legal review windowMED
Q-01Who signs the addendum on their side?OPEN
03 ⁄

Share it.
Search it. Ask it.

Send a link to the room. Paste the Markdown into Slack. Download it as a single file. Push the action items into your tracker. Whatever your team's habit is, the report meets it there.

Three weeks later — "what did we decide about the pilot scope?" Ask the meeting. Answer in a sentence, with the quote and the timestamp it came from.

Later that month · A question lands
What you get back

The document
you wish someone
had written for you.

Eight sections, every time, in the same places. Skim it in a minute. Read it in five. Search it in a second.

01 · Summary

The one-paragraph version.

If you only read one thing, it's the top of the page. Plain prose. Concrete outcomes. No fluff.

"Agreed to a phased pilot. Security questionnaire opens this week."
02 · Decisions

What was agreed, and why.

Each decision gets a stable ID, a rationale line, the person who called it, and a note on whether it's reversible.

DEC-02 · Adopt phased pilot · Two-way · Owen K.
03 · Action items

One owner. One due date. Every time.

The most important section. Single accountable owner per row. Inferred due dates are visibly marked.

AI-01 · Send questionnaire · Priya S. · May 26 · HIGH
04 · Risks

What could derail this — flagged.

Severity (low / med / high), owner, and a one-line mitigation each. Nothing is "TBD" — every risk has someone.

RISK-01 · Region B legal window · MED · Sara M.
05 · Open questions

The things nobody answered.

Pulled straight from "let me check and get back to you" moments. Tagged with the person who can answer.

Q-01 · Who signs the addendum? · Owen K.
06 · Next steps

What happens next, in order.

Distinct from action items — these are meeting-level moves. "Schedule follow-up." "Send recap to leadership."

Schedule mid-pilot review · Week of Jun 16
07 · Participants

Who spoke. Who owned what.

Speaking time as a percentage of the call, plus the action items each person walked away with.

Priya S. · 32% · owns AI-01, AI-04
08 · Glossary

Acronyms and jargon, defined.

Picked up from the call — O2C, EDI, MRP — with a one-line plain-English explanation for the next reader.

O2C · Order-to-cash. Sales process end-to-end.

Anything that captured the call.

If your meeting tool exports it, we take it. If you forgot to record, paste in your notes — we'll still pull what we can.

Recording .mp4
Audio .m4a
Audio .wav
Transcript .vtt
Transcript .srt
Notes .docx
Markdown .md
Plain text .txt
Chat log .html
A normal Tuesday

From 10:00 AM
to lunch.

What changes when you stop writing the recap by hand. The morning hour you used to lose to taking notes — and the afternoon you used to lose to writing them up — back on your calendar.

10:00 AM

Client status call on Teams.

You and three of their team. An hour of back-and-forth on the rollout timeline, two scope tweaks, a handful of "let me check and get back to you" moments. The recording captures everything.

11:00 AM

Call ends. You head to lunch.

Drop the recording into notologic on the way out. No outline. No skeleton. No "let me clean these notes up first." Just the file.

11:08 AM

The report is ready.

The two scope changes are in the Decisions section, with a note on who agreed to each. The seven follow-ups are in Action items — three owned by you, two owned by their lead, two open. The "let me check" moments are in Open questions.

11:12 AM

You share the link with the client.

Copy the action items into your task tracker. Done. You went to that meeting and walked out with a clean follow-up — without writing a word.

3 wks later

Their PM asks: "phased pilot or hard cutover?"

You search across every meeting, find the call from week two, and send back the answer with the quote and the timestamp. The argument never happens. The record settles it.

Built for the meetings you can't afford to forget

Five shapes of meeting.
One shape of follow-up.

From a 25-minute standup to a four-hour workshop, the report comes out in the same shape. Your team learns where to look once.

Client & sales calls

Walk out of the demo with the deal already half-written.

Scope changes captured as decisions. Objections captured as risks. The "we'll send you XYZ" promises captured as action items with your name on them.

"We share the recap with the client an hour after the call. It's our new follow-up email."
Discovery & workshops

Hours of conversation, distilled before the room cools down.

Long-form sessions where context lives in nuance. Topic-by-topic walk-through with timestamps, so you can jump back to the moment of the decision.

"A four-hour workshop turns into a six-page recap. Nobody re-reads the transcript again."
Standups & reviews

Catch the standup you missed in 45 seconds.

Quick recaps that read like a teammate brought you up to speed in the hallway. Owners and blockers surfaced. No more "what did I miss?" pings.

"My PM watches standups on her commute as a one-paragraph read."
Steering & exec syncs

The record an executive can actually skim.

Decisions and risks at the top. Speaking time and ownership made explicit. Nothing gets quietly assigned to "the team."

"Our steering committee reads the recap, not the deck."
Hiring & interviews

Comparable, structured panels — without taking notes.

Every interview comes back as the same shape: signals, themes, follow-up questions. Debriefs get shorter; debate gets sharper.

"Three loops, three reports, side by side. The debrief writes itself."
Internal training

An onboarding library that wasn't there yesterday.

Every recorded session becomes a searchable artifact with glossary, timestamps, and ownership. New hires ask the meeting, not the team.

"New engineers spend their first week asking the meetings, not interrupting senior staff."
Meets your team where it already is

No new place
to remember to check.

notologic lives on the edges. The recap shows up in the channels you already read. Action items land in the tracker you already use. The report is a link, a Markdown blob, or a clean HTML file — whichever your team prefers.

Microsoft Teams
Auto-join & capture
Soon
Zoom
Auto-join & capture
Soon
Google Meet
Auto-join & capture
Soon
Slack
Post recap to channel
Available
Notion
Embed the report
Beta
Linear
Push action items
Beta
Jira
Push action items
Beta
Email digest
Weekly to leads
Available
Public link
Share with clients
Available
Single-file HTML
Download & archive
Available
Markdown export
Paste anywhere
Available
SSO & SCIM
Okta · Entra · Google
Business
Pricing

Priced by the meeting,
not by the seat.

Pay for what gets analyzed. Bring as many viewers as you like — viewing recaps is free, always. No per-seat math.

Business

For the org where every meeting eventually matters in a contract or a board deck.

$199/mo
per workspace · 300 meetings included
Talk to us
  • 300 meetings a month, pooled
  • SSO & SCIM provisioning
  • Audit log · retention controls
  • Custom data residency
  • Priority support & rollout
  • Annual contracts available

Higher volumes priced per meeting.

Enterprise

For the org that wants notologic wired into Azure DevOps, Jira, PlanAI, Linear, ServiceNow, or whatever runs the work.

Custom
scoped per integration & volume
Talk to us
  • Everything in Business
  • Direct push to Azure DevOps, Jira, Linear, PlanAI, ServiceNow
  • Custom webhooks & SAML / OIDC
  • Dedicated data residency (EU / US)
  • White-glove onboarding & named CSM
  • Volume contracts & custom SLA

Pilots typically land in 1–2 weeks.

FAQ

The questions that come up first.

Couldn't find what you're looking for? Send us a note.

Do I have to invite a bot to my meetings?

No. notologic doesn't sit in the meeting. Hit record in Teams, Zoom, or Meet the way you already do — then drop the file in afterwards. The clean recap comes out the other side.

How long does the analysis take?

For most recordings, the report is ready in roughly the time it takes to grab a coffee — typically under ten minutes for a one-hour call. You'll get an email when yours is done.

What if I just have a transcript?

That's the fastest path. Drop in a .txt, .md, .vtt, or .srt and the report is usually ready within a minute. If you have the agenda or chat log too, add them — they make the recap sharper.

Who else can see my meetings?

Nobody you haven't told. Reports default to private inside your workspace. You decide if and when to share — by link, by inviting a teammate, or by exporting the file for offline use.

Can I edit the report after it's generated?

Yes. Owners, due dates, priorities, decisions — every field is editable. Anything you change is tracked in the activity log so the audit trail stays intact.

What languages are supported?

English transcripts work today. French, Spanish, German, and Portuguese are in early access — reports come back in the meeting's language by default, or in English on request.

How does this compare to my meeting tool's own summary?

Built-in summaries give you a paragraph. notologic gives you eight structured sections — decisions, owners, due dates, risks, open questions — searchable and queryable months later, in the same shape every time.

Is my data used to train models?

No. Your meetings are yours. We don't use customer content to train anything, ever. On the Business plan you can pick your data region and set retention down to as little as 24 hours.

Try it with one meeting this week.

A clean recap, owned action items, and a record you can ask three weeks later — for every meeting on your calendar.

14-day trial · Ready in under a minute · Bring your own recording