Top 10 best AI meeting assistants in 2024

When you’re in a meeting, you’re splitting yourself in two: the active listener who’s paying attention to the speaker, and the thorough note-taker that’s saving every insight for later. But doing two jobs at once is always tricky. You’ll either miss the opportunity to ask a great question or fail to take a critical note that you’ll need in the future.

AI meeting assistants are here to help. They’ll record your calls, transcribe the audio, and store it all for later use. You can then use a range of AI features to extract information, doing things like summarizing the transcript, listing key insights, and generating action items. 

I spent time doing in-depth research and testing on all the AI meeting assistants available, and based on my experiences, these are the best AI meeting assistants.

The best AI online meeting assistants

  • Otter.ai
  • An AI meeting assistant that records audio, writes notes, automatically captures slides, and generates summaries.
  • Fireflies
  •  for collaboration and topic tracking
  • Airgram
  •  for AI data extraction
  • Krisp
  •  for high-quality meeting audio
  • Avoma
  •  for conversation analytics
  • tl;dv
  •  for AI-powered meeting search
  • Equal Time
  •  for inclusive meetings
  • Rewatch
  •  for creating a video wiki
  • Nyota
  •  for AI feature variety
  • Fellow
  •  for native integrations
  • Fathom
  •  for a free option

What makes the best AI note taker for meetings?

How we evaluate and test apps

All of our best apps roundups are written by humans who’ve spent much of their careers using, testing, and writing about software. We spend dozens of hours researching and testing apps, using each app as it’s intended to be used and evaluating it against the criteria we set for the category. We’re never paid for placement in our articles from any app or for links to any site—we value the trust readers put in us to offer authentic evaluations of the categories and apps we review. For more details on our process, read the full rundown of how we select apps to feature on MD blog.

There’s one important distinction here: AI meeting assistants aren’t out to replace your current video conferencing platform. Quite the opposite: they’ll empower Zoom, Google Meet, or Microsoft Teams (and other platforms) with a range of new features that’ll help you keep track of your meetings. You can use them to refresh your memory, accurately quote people, or propagate important information to all members of your team.

There’s one common thread among the apps you’re about to discover: all of them transcribe your meetings’ audio into text, making it easy to search through everything that was said. From that point on, each app has its own spin on how to best assist you: they can help in summarizing the entire conversation, extracting key insights, or providing analytics to help you improve productivity.

Here’s what we looked for as we were testing the AI meeting assistants:

  • Easy implementation: These apps are simple to connect to your calendar and video conferencing software, and work with—at minimum—Zoom and Google Meet.
  • Quality AI features. I looked at transcription quality and the value of any other AI features the platform offers, including summarization, extracting insights, and sentiment analysis.
  • Automation and other productivity features. I prioritized apps that offer time-saving features, such as automatically joining meetings for you or helping you deliver meeting agendas before the event.
  • Organization and collaboration features. Once the meeting is over, you need to keep things organized, so it’s easier to search for information later. Sharing should also be simple, so you can keep your entire team in the loop.
  • Integrations. The more the merrier, especially if you can send lead data to a CRM, action items to a task management app, or a summary of a meeting to a dedicated Slack channel.

We tested these apps over the course of two weeks, as we held meetings either with ourselves or with our clients. Once these meetings were over, we went to the dashboard to judge the quality of the transcript and see what features were available to extract more value from it. We checked out how easy it was to share it with others, and tried a few integrations to see how seamless the data transmission was.

One note: We didn’t include video conferencing apps (like Vowel), no matter how good their meeting assistant features were. When you’re looking for a meeting assistant, you’re not looking to completely migrate to an entirely new platform, just add an extra layer of productivity features on top of what you already have. (But if you do want to move to a greener video conferencing pasture, check out MD’s list of the best video conferencing apps). We also didn’t include any pure revenue intelligence apps—while some of these apps have revenue intelligence features, we wanted apps that could be used for any sort of meeting.

The best AI online meeting assistants at a glance

AI Assistant Best for Platforms Free plan
Fireflies Collaboration and topic tracking Zoom, Meet, Teams, Webex, GoTo Meeting, Skype, Dialpad Total 800 minutes of meeting storage
Airgram AI data extraction Zoom, Meet, Teams 5 meeting recordings per month, maximum 30 minutes per meeting
Krisp High-quality meeting audio Available in all apps 60 minutes of noise-reduced meetings and 2 meeting notes per day, unlimited transcriptions
Avoma Conversation analytics Zoom, Meet, Teams, Blue Jeans, GoTo Meeting, Uber Conference, Lifesize 1,200 minutes per month, stored for up to 3 months
tl;dv AI-powered meeting search Zoom, Meet Unlimited Zoom and Meet transcription
Equal Time Inclusive meetings Zoom, Meet, Teams 40 minutes of transcription per meeting
Rewatch Creating a video wiki Zoom, Meet, Teams 15 transcribed meetings and 5 AI summaries per month
Nyota AI feature variety Zoom, Meet, Teams None
Fellow Plenty of native integrations Zoom, Meet Unlimited transcription
Fathom A free option Zoom, Meet Teams Free version available for individuals

Best AI meeting assistant for collaboration and topic tracking

 

Otter

Get an AI meeting assistant that records audio, writes notes, automatically captures slides, and generates summaries.

Collaborate with teammates in the live transcript, by adding comments, highlighting key points, and assigning action items.

Save time with automated meeting notes by connecting Otter to your Google or Microsoft calendar and it can automatically join and record your meetings on Zoom, Microsoft Teams, and Google Meet. Follow along live on the web or in the iOS or Android app.

When someone shares slides during a virtual meeting, Otter automatically captures and inserts them into the meeting notes, providing complete context of the content that was discussed.

After the meeting, Otter generates and emails a summary that allows you to easily recall and share key information, saving you time from having to revisit the entire transcript.

  • Record and transcribe calls instantly.
  • Allows adding comments and highlighting key points.
  • Connects to Google & Microsoft Calendar.
  • Automatically captures and inserts slides into meeting notes.
  • Generates summaries automatically and emails them.

 

Fireflies.ai

Platforms: Zoom, Meet, Teams, Webex, GoTo Meeting, Skype, Dialpad

Fireflies, our pick for the best AI meeting assistant for collaboration and topic tracking

Fireflies pros:

  • Has generative AI features (AskFred)
  • Can send meeting recaps automatically

Fireflies cons:

  • Some screens are too cluttered

When there are dozens of meetings going on every week, Fireflies helps you line them all up and keep them organized. The range of available AI features makes it easy to sort your meetings by topic, project, or team, surfacing the information you need when you need it.

The app will transcribe everything everyone says in the meeting, assigning it to the appropriate speaker once you identify who’s who in the app. When the meeting is over, it’ll start working its magic on the transcription:

  • It isolates information such as dates and times, metrics mentioned, tasks, and questions, so you filter them later.
  • It runs sentiment analysis, helping identify the positive, negative, and neutral parts of the meeting.
  • It offers a list of everyone who spoke, including a word-per-minute statistic and percentage talked in relationship to others.
  • It offers a list of topics tracked—and you can add your own, so Fireflies can keep doing its sorting magic.

When you need this information in your other apps, Fireflies offers a great range of native integrations with giants like HubSpot or Salesforce for storing all lead data, Slack for team chat, and Dropbox to keep your data stored for the long haul. If your favorite app isn’t listed, you can integrate Fireflies with Zapier, helping you connect Fireflies to thousands of other apps. Here are a couple of examples.

Transcribe audio files in Google Drive with Fireflies.ai

     

     

    Rewatch price: Free plan available for 15 transcribed meetings and 5 AI summaries per month; Team plan starts at $23.75/user/month.

    Best AI meeting assistant for AI feature variety

    Nyota

    Platforms: Zoom, Meet, Teams

    Nyota, our pick for the best AI meeting assistant for AI feature variety

    Nyota pros:

    • Automatically create reminders
    • Groups parts of the transcript by topic

    Nyota cons:

    • No free plan

    Nyota takes the cake for feature variety, as it offers the highest count of useful AI features—other apps in this list have a combination, but not all of them. Nyota transcribes your meetings, and goes further by extracting notes, key takeaways, and action items. On top of that, it offers AI-powered insights that cover sentiment analysis with emoji, talking time-tracking, and grouping of meeting topics, so you can easily revisit them later—a kind of enhanced summary.

    To help you get in the zone, Nyota sends over an email every morning with all the meetings you have for the day and lets you access a pre-meeting rundown just before each one starts. This support helps you keep all the meeting information close by and popping up at the relevant time, so you don’t have to worry about the details before it’s time to do so.

    Still on the topic of aiding you in doing your best, Nyota can generate meeting agendas with AI, so you have a first draft of discussion points. You can then tweak it and use it as inspiration for the upcoming call. Once you wrap up that one-on-one, a meeting debriefing email will fire to everyone who attended, saving you the time of having to do it yourself.

    One other thing I liked is the fact that you can configure which meetings Nyota will or will not join. This way, you can choose to keep track of everything, just one-on-ones, or just team calls. And if you’re a fan of Star Trek, I’m sure you can see the wink to Captain Uhura. Sadly, the app can’t transcribe Klingon-spoken meetings, no matter which dialect.

    Nyota price: Standard plan starts at £29 per month.

    Best AI meeting assistant for native integrations

    Fellow

    Platforms: Zoom, Meet

    Fellow, our pick for the best AI meeting assistant for native integrations

    Fellow pros:

    • Can track all the information about a topic or project
    • Lets you create meeting templates

    Fellow cons:

    • Desktop app is a bit buggy

    Fellow wants to do more than just help you with your meetings. It’s a productivity tool where you can organize your schedule, turning the audio in your meetings into a set of talking points and action items that you can quickly add to your task list. It has all the collaboration features that let you assign these tasks and see who’s responsible for which—and see your own in a dedicated tab.

    There’s an important detail that I should mention first: Fellow won’t keep complete transcripts of your meetings. Perhaps it’s trying to keep overwhelm at the minimum. After all, if you’re not getting lost in transcripts, you’re probably tackling your work, so that’s mission successful. But if you need a thorough record of all your calls, you’ll have to look elsewhere.

    Since you’re probably running your show using a collection of apps you discovered over the years, Fellow has a long list of native integrations, so you can turn it into your control board. Here are some top picks from that list:

    • CRM platforms such as Salesforce and HubSpot
    • Software engineering productivity tools like Jira and GitHub
    • Storage services like Dropbox, iCloud, and Box
    • Productivity staples like Asana, monday.com, and Notion
    • Video platforms like YouTube and Vimeo

    If you still don’t find what you’re looking for, you can connect Fellow to Zapier , increasing the integrations list to thousands of apps.

    Google Tasks + Fellow

    Sometimes, less is more. Fellow made it on this list due to the interesting spin it adds to the category, focusing on productivity instead of thorough meeting records.

    Fellow price: Fee plan available for unlimited transcription; Pro plan starts at $9/user/month.

    Best free AI meeting assistant

    Fathom

    Platforms: Zoom, Meet, Teams

    Fathom, our pick for the best free AI meeting assistant

    Fathom pros:

    • Easy meeting sharing
    • Keyword alerts (paid plan only)

    Fathom cons:

    • Some quirks when using it with Meet and Teams

    One of the first things you’ll read on Fathom‘s landing page is that it’s completely free. Catch? No catch. The dev team wants to raise awareness of its tool, so they’re offering a generous free version that will let you transcribe all your meetings.

    This is the baseline. Once the meeting is over, you can generate a meeting summary and send that information to your CRM of choice or straight to the appropriate Slack channel. What’s more, you can create short clips of your meeting, add each to playlists, and share them with others, a great way to organize insights across meetings. Fathom offers all the core features of the category at no cost, so it’s great if you don’t need the advanced stuff.

    If you usually copy and paste things around, you’ll be happy to know of this interesting possibility: when copying content out of Fathom and pasting it somewhere else, it lands fully formatted, so you don’t have to beautify it later.

    The free version offers a lot, but of course, there’s a paid plan if you need more. When you hop on the Team plan, you’ll be able to organize all your meetings in a Team Calls tab, see meeting statistics for each member (useful for sales call coaching), configure alerts that’ll pop up whenever a keyword is mentioned, and a range of automation features to simplify the connections to your CRM and other apps.

    Fathom is in a really sweet spot. If you’re unsure whether an AI meeting assistant will help you improve productivity, be sure to take this one for a test ride.

    Fathom price: Free version available for individuals; Team plan starts at $19/user/month.

    Lean into AI meeting notes

    With all your meetings now transcribed into text, it becomes much easier to search them without maddeningly going back and forward on a video timeline. More than that, it makes it easier to collaborate and share meetings with everyone.

    And if having too many meetings is threatening your team’s productivity, these tools can be a great way to reduce the total number of participants. Since you can share the important parts of each call, your team can keep working and align as they move forward in each project.

      Need to share critical information with your team? You can create soundbites, clipping important parts of meetings into shareable moments. People can come by the meeting page to leave their comments and reactions, so it’s easy to see how everyone’s keeping up. And if you have an internal knowledge base, you can embed meetings or soundbites, helping you keep a thorough single source of truth.

      Fireflies price: Free plan available, with a total of 800 minutes of meeting storage; paid plans start at $18/user/month.

      Best AI meeting assistant for AI data extraction

      Airgram

       

      Platforms: Zoom, Meet, Teams

      Airgram, our pick for the best AI meeting assistant for AI data extraction

      Airgram pros:

      • Multilanguage support available
      • Meeting summarization is great

      Airgram cons:

      • The bot can sometimes forget to join the call

      AI is much more than generative text or images. Among its many possibilities, you can use it to turn unstructured data (e.g., long and messy text documents) into neatly arranged data, ready to send to a database or to another productivity app.

      Here, Airgram does a great job. In addition to turning every bit of sound into written text, it can extract mentions of people, places, and currencies, among many other data types. You can access them once you subscribe to one of the paid plans, seeing everything in a list. This is especially useful if your meetings rely on sharing facts, metrics, and insights that you’d like to store and keep track of. While there aren’t features that let you look into the data with an analytics dashboard, you can access them on a meeting-by-meeting basis and go from there.

      Another detail I liked is how the manual notes and the transcript work together. It’s natural to add a few of your own notes once the meeting is over, and you can do that in the appropriate meeting screen. If you want to quote a part of the transcript, you can drag the bit you want into your manual notes, making it easier than the traditional copy/paste ritual.

      Airgram is strong if you need to collaborate on your meeting transcripts or when you need to share information with others. You and your team can leave comments on the transcript, highlight important moments for future reference, and add notes. More than text, you can create shareable video clips, saving your team the time it takes to search the meeting timeline.

      When you’re ready to send everything to your data-crunching software or save time automating your meetings, you can integrate Airgram with Zapier

      Here are a couple examples of how to get started.

      Add new Airgram meetings to Google Drive

       

      A final note on the integrations front: Airgram also connects with Microsoft Word and Google Docs, so if you rely a lot on editing your transcripts into documents and sharing them with your entire company, be sure to give it a try.

      Airgram price: Free plan available, with 5 meeting recordings per month and a maximum 30 minutes per meeting; Plus plan starts at $18/user/month.

      Best AI meeting assistant for high-quality meeting audio

      Krisp

      Platforms: Available in all apps

      Krisp, our pick for the best AI meeting assistant for high-quality meeting audio

      Krisp pros:

      • Surprising background audio suppression
      • Almost no voice tone change

      Krisp cons:

      • Limited feature set

      Sometimes it’s hard to hear your CEO as their kids run wild in the background.

       Krisp is here to let the kids do what they want while you still get all the info you need, clearly through your headphones and in a text transcription. Crisp audio, as the name implies.

      Krisp stands out from the other apps on this list in that it’s primarily used to improve audio quality, but it offers transcription features that you can use to turn all your meetings into text too, so that makes it land nicely within the scope of our discussion here.

      You need to install Krisp on your computer so it can do its magic, adding a few new audio devices to your machine. You’ll have to select it as the audio input and output in your Zoom and Meet apps, which makes the setup a tiny bit more complicated—there’s good help to guide you, though. Because of this setup experience, Krisp doesn’t need bots joining your calls, providing a more seamless experience in the end.

      Besides being highly effective—it can filter out music, ringtones, and background chatter without making your audio go full weird—it has another thing that I really appreciate. Since the app runs on your computer, it consumes system resources to optimize your audio. The good stuff here is that it’s just a tiny bit of processing power and a modest amount of RAM, meaning your video calls (they rely a lot on these two computer stats) won’t be largely affected by using Krisp.

      Wherever there’s audio input, remember that you can use Krisp to optimize it. Look to your computer’s taskbar, and tweak the settings for the job at hand.

      Krisp price: Free plan available for 60 minutes of noise-reduced meetings, 2 meeting notes per day, and unlimited transcriptions; Pro plans start at $12/user/month.

      Best AI meeting assistant for conversation analytics

      Avoma

      Platforms: Zoom, Meet, Teams, Blue Jeans, GoTo Meeting, Uber Conference, Lifesize

      Avoma, our pick for the best AI meeting assistant for conversation analytics

      Avoma pros:

      • Great for coaching sales teams
      • Very easy to use

      Avoma cons:

      • Pricey

      Having all your meeting transcriptions organized is one thing. Extracting the underlying information from each one of them to make better decisions is another thing entirely. 

      Avoma knows that transcriptions aren’t enough if you’re on a mission to improve sales calls, UX interviews, or internal meetings. This is why it offers a range of tools that let you dig deep into every meeting with the power of AI:

      • A dashboard where you can track the total conversations everyone’s having, including the median amount of meetings per user.
      • A tool that tracks filler words, so you can get rid of the flow-breaking “ah”s, “uh”s, and “um”s.
      • A monologue-tracking statistic, where you can see how long someone talked continuously for, great to discover where conversations lose their dynamic.
      • A talking-to-listening ratio tracker, letting you understand how much you should listen before you talk while in customer meetings.
      • A competitive tracking tool, helping you see how you stack up versus competitors in the words of your customers. Avoma keeps track of every mention of the competition and also whether you lost or won deals when that happened, so you can correlate the information and adjust.
      • Overall topic tracking, so you know what people talk about the most, broken down by keywords. There’s also a tracker that lets you know when each topic is usually brought into the conversation, useful to help you structure your future meetings.
      • And a range of coaching tools, including AI scoring, so you can help new sales reps find their footing faster and start closing more deals.

      This toolkit makes Avoma a great fit for customer-facing teams, whether it’s in support or sales. It’s great to improve visibility for managers, helping you make better decisions and lead your team to success. And the dev team went all in on CRM integrations, offering native Salesforce, HubSpot, Copper, and Pipedrive integrations, so you can focus on ongoing optimization, not on endless admin work.

      Avoma price: Free plan available for 1,200 minutes per month, stored for up to 3 months; Starter plan starts at $24/user/month.

      Best AI meeting assistant for AI-powered search

      tl;dv

       Platforms: Zoom, Meet

      tl;dv, our pick for the best AI meeting assistant for AI-powered search

      tl;dv pros:

      • Generous free plan
      • Lightweight on your PC’s resources

      tl;dv cons:

      • Takes a bit to join and start recording a meeting

      Before the age of social media, people were forum dwellers (hi). No one liked seeing a new post with a wall of text, so you’d frequently see annoyed users scribbling “tl;dr” (“too long, didn’t read”), and then moving on to the next post.

      The tl;dv team knows that similar things can happen to meeting recordings, especially if people have to binge-watch the latest marketing metrics deep dive. To help your team skip a few episodes but still get the full picture, tl;dv offers a robust AI-powered search feature: based on the search term that you write in, it returns a detailed breakdown of meetings and transcript excerpts that meet the query. If that’s not enough, you can summarize the results with AI, which will produce a text paragraph based on the search results.

      And this isn’t the whole story. You can add manual notes to the transcript, complete with timestamps. You can create a set of folders to separate calls, so it’s easy to browse through later on. And if you want to share little nuggets of information, you can put together a short video clip by highlighting the transcript and clicking a button. Later, you can share the link with your team or send it to Notion, HubSpot, Salesforce, or Slack.

      Unlike other options on this list, once you integrate tl;dv with Google Meet or Zoom, it stands ready to start recording only once you click the button. It doesn’t automatically jump in and start working, which can be a win if you don’t want to record every single second of every single call.

      tl;dv price: Free plan available for unlimited Zoom and Meet transcription; Pro plan starts at $25/recording user/month.

      Best AI meeting assistant for inclusive meetings

      Equal Time

      Platforms: Zoom, Meet, Teams

      Equal Time, our pick for the best AI meeting assistant for inclusive meetings

      Equal Time pros:

      • Tracks questions and keywords
      • Tracks attendance

      Equal Time cons:

      • Interface isn’t as nice as others

      By now, you may have read dozens of articles detailing how introverts have great insights to share. They’re observant and careful but lack the impulse to put their expertise on the table. If the extroverts are always stealing the show in your meetings, 

      Equal Time will help you identify who’s who and get everyone to participate equally.

      Once you integrate Equal Time into Google Meet or Zoom, you’ll see a sidebar with the following information in real-time:

      • The speaking time for every meeting participant displayed as a percentage.
      • The inclusion score of the meeting, measuring how well the time is distributed among all attendees.
      • A monologue counter, helpful to track how many times the conversation has died.
      • A pie chart with the group speaking balance, so you can divide people by roles or teams and ensure that each gets a proportional amount of air time.

      When the meeting is over, you’ll get an email with the breakdown of these stats. You’ll be able to see the talking time breakdown for each participant, along with a set of checks that tell you whether that person spoke at the meeting or not, if they were late, or if they’re prone to monologue. Below these, you’ll find the typical meeting summary, powered by AI, and a set of tips to help you improve your meetings in the future.

      Heading over to the dashboard, you’ll be able to see all of this info along with a few extras. You can get a simple sentiment analysis for the meeting, learn the number of questions asked (and you can click to read all of them), and clearly see who is contributing too much or too little to the conversation.

      While the user experience on the app isn’t as top-notch as others on this list, these features are robust enough to make up for it, especially if you’re having trouble bringing everyone into the fold.

      Equal Time price: Free plan available for 40 minutes of transcription per meeting; Premium starts at $20/month.

      Best AI meeting assistant for creating a video wiki

      Rewatch

      Platforms: Zoom, Meet, Teams

      Rewatch, our pick for the best AI meeting assistant for creating a video wiki

      Rewatch pros:

      • In-depth meeting search results
      • Lots of native integrations

      Rewatch cons:

      • Requires ongoing organization of the content you upload

      When words aren’t enough, videos can step in to fill in the gaps, especially if you share a lot of instructional, over-the-shoulder content. 

      Rewatch helps you turn your knowledge base into a 30FPS wiki, keeping all your video communications (meetings included) in one place, searchable and ready to go.

      When you integrate Rewatch with your video conferencing software, it automatically joins all meetings and transcribes everything. Later, you can add a meeting description and click to generate AI meeting notes, too, so you can see the content of each of them at a glance.

      Your team can collaborate on each transcript by highlighting and adding their own comments, or by leaving a trail of emoji on the video’s timeline, letting you know which parts were mindblowing or worthy of a confetti shower. You can set up chapters for each video, which is useful when you have a meeting that you’re constantly coming back to, making it easier to find all the information you need in the future.

      But the video wiki really is the main course. You can create pages for each topic, team, or project and then add all the videos you want. Your team can subscribe to each of these pages, getting a notification when a new video is posted. If there are subcategories on each topic, you can add them and further separate videos, helping keep things organized. It feels like YouTube without the ads.

      Now that you’re using video as a way to store and browse company knowledge, you can also use the Creator feature to post short videos either by recording yourself, sending a stream of GIFs, capturing your screen, or putting together a quick slide. This is great to share quick updates, walkthroughs, or company-wide announcements.

      Another interesting feature I liked is creating video series: you can start an async team standup by creating a series and recording your contribution. Then, every single person on your team will get notified to do the same, and you can watch each person’s recording in a sequence, a bit like Instagram stories. All this without having to schedule an actual meeting, saving an extra 30 minutes per week—or more.

         

         

        Rewatch price: Free plan available for 15 transcribed meetings and 5 AI summaries per month; Team plan starts at $23.75/user/month.

        Best AI meeting assistant for AI feature variety

        Nyota

        Platforms: Zoom, Meet, Teams

        Nyota, our pick for the best AI meeting assistant for AI feature variety

        Nyota pros:

        • Automatically create reminders
        • Groups parts of the transcript by topic

        Nyota cons:

        • No free plan

        Nyota takes the cake for feature variety, as it offers the highest count of useful AI features—other apps in this list have a combination, but not all of them. Nyota transcribes your meetings, and goes further by extracting notes, key takeaways, and action items. On top of that, it offers AI-powered insights that cover sentiment analysis with emoji, talking time-tracking, and grouping of meeting topics, so you can easily revisit them later—a kind of enhanced summary.

        To help you get in the zone, Nyota sends over an email every morning with all the meetings you have for the day and lets you access a pre-meeting rundown just before each one starts. This support helps you keep all the meeting information close by and popping up at the relevant time, so you don’t have to worry about the details before it’s time to do so.

        Still on the topic of aiding you in doing your best, Nyota can generate meeting agendas with AI, so you have a first draft of discussion points. You can then tweak it and use it as inspiration for the upcoming call. Once you wrap up that one-on-one, a meeting debriefing email will fire to everyone who attended, saving you the time of having to do it yourself.

        One other thing I liked is the fact that you can configure which meetings Nyota will or will not join. This way, you can choose to keep track of everything, just one-on-ones, or just team calls. And if you’re a fan of Star Trek, I’m sure you can see the wink to Captain Uhura. Sadly, the app can’t transcribe Klingon-spoken meetings, no matter which dialect.

        Nyota price: Standard plan starts at £29 per month.

        Best AI meeting assistant for native integrations

        Fellow

        Platforms: Zoom, Meet

        Fellow, our pick for the best AI meeting assistant for native integrations

        Fellow pros:

        • Can track all the information about a topic or project
        • Lets you create meeting templates

        Fellow cons:

        • Desktop app is a bit buggy

        Fellow wants to do more than just help you with your meetings. It’s a productivity tool where you can organize your schedule, turning the audio in your meetings into a set of talking points and action items that you can quickly add to your task list. It has all the collaboration features that let you assign these tasks and see who’s responsible for which—and see your own in a dedicated tab.

        There’s an important detail that I should mention first: Fellow won’t keep complete transcripts of your meetings. Perhaps it’s trying to keep overwhelm at the minimum. After all, if you’re not getting lost in transcripts, you’re probably tackling your work, so that’s mission successful. But if you need a thorough record of all your calls, you’ll have to look elsewhere.

        Since you’re probably running your show using a collection of apps you discovered over the years, Fellow has a long list of native integrations, so you can turn it into your control board. Here are some top picks from that list:

        • CRM platforms such as Salesforce and HubSpot
        • Software engineering productivity tools like Jira and GitHub
        • Storage services like Dropbox, iCloud, and Box
        • Productivity staples like Asana, monday.com, and Notion
        • Video platforms like YouTube and Vimeo

        If you still don’t find what you’re looking for, you can connect Fellow to Zapier , increasing the integrations list to thousands of apps.

        Google Tasks + Fellow

        Sometimes, less is more. Fellow made it on this list due to the interesting spin it adds to the category, focusing on productivity instead of thorough meeting records.

        Fellow price: Fee plan available for unlimited transcription; Pro plan starts at $9/user/month.

        Best free AI meeting assistant

        Fathom

        Platforms: Zoom, Meet, Teams

        Fathom, our pick for the best free AI meeting assistant

        Fathom pros:

        • Easy meeting sharing
        • Keyword alerts (paid plan only)

        Fathom cons:

        • Some quirks when using it with Meet and Teams

        One of the first things you’ll read on Fathom‘s landing page is that it’s completely free. Catch? No catch. The dev team wants to raise awareness of its tool, so they’re offering a generous free version that will let you transcribe all your meetings.

        This is the baseline. Once the meeting is over, you can generate a meeting summary and send that information to your CRM of choice or straight to the appropriate Slack channel. What’s more, you can create short clips of your meeting, add each to playlists, and share them with others, a great way to organize insights across meetings. Fathom offers all the core features of the category at no cost, so it’s great if you don’t need the advanced stuff.

        If you usually copy and paste things around, you’ll be happy to know of this interesting possibility: when copying content out of Fathom and pasting it somewhere else, it lands fully formatted, so you don’t have to beautify it later.

        The free version offers a lot, but of course, there’s a paid plan if you need more. When you hop on the Team plan, you’ll be able to organize all your meetings in a Team Calls tab, see meeting statistics for each member (useful for sales call coaching), configure alerts that’ll pop up whenever a keyword is mentioned, and a range of automation features to simplify the connections to your CRM and other apps.

        Fathom is in a really sweet spot. If you’re unsure whether an AI meeting assistant will help you improve productivity, be sure to take this one for a test ride.

        Fathom price: Free version available for individuals; Team plan starts at $19/user/month.

        Lean into AI meeting notes

        With all your meetings now transcribed into text, it becomes much easier to search them without maddeningly going back and forward on a video timeline. More than that, it makes it easier to collaborate and share meetings with everyone.

        And if having too many meetings is threatening your team’s productivity, these tools can be a great way to reduce the total number of participants. Since you can share the important parts of each call, your team can keep working and align as they move forward in each project.

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