Have you ever left a one-hour meeting only to realize you forgot the most important action item? Or worse, have you spent two hours after a meeting just trying to organize your notes?
In 2025, manual note-taking is optional. AI can now “listen” to your meetings (both online and in-person), transcribe every word, and pull out the “to-do” list automatically.
The Three Levels of Meeting AI
Depending on your environment, you can use AI in three different ways:
Level 1: The “Digital Invite” (Online Meetings)
Tools like Otter.ai, Fireflies.ai, or Fathom act as a digital participant.
How it works: You connect it to your Google or Outlook calendar. When a Zoom, Teams, or Google Meet starts, the AI “joins” the call.
The Result: It records the video, transcribes the audio in real-time, and sends a summary to your inbox 5 minutes after the call ends.
Level 2: The “Upload” (Recorded Audio)
If you have a recording of a lecture, a voice memo, or a previous meeting, you can “feed” it to an AI.
The Tool: OpenAI Whisper or Claude.
How it works: You upload the MP3 or MP4 file. You then ask: “Based on this audio, what are the three main takeaways and who is responsible for what?”
Level 3: The “In-Person” Assistant (Physical Meetings)
If you are meeting someone at a coffee shop or in a physical boardroom, your smartphone is your best friend.
The Tool: The ChatGPT Mobile App or Platypus.
How it works: Use the “Voice-to-Text” feature to record the conversation.
Pro-Tip: Simply say, “I’m going to record our brainstorming session so I don’t miss anything,” and keep your phone on the table.
What a “Perfect” AI Summary Looks Like
A good AI meeting assistant doesn’t just give you a transcript (which is too long to read). It provides a structured summary. Here is the format you should aim for:
Executive Summary: A 2-sentence overview of the meeting’s purpose.
Key Discussion Points: Bullet points of the main topics.
Decisions Made: A clear list of what was agreed upon.
Action Items: A checklist with Names and Deadlines.
The Ethics of Recording
Before you start using these tools, always follow the “Transparency Rule”:
Always inform participants: “Hey everyone, I’m using an AI note-taker so I can stay present in the conversation. Is everyone okay with that?”
Private Data: If the meeting involves highly sensitive legal or medical data, ensure you are using an “Enterprise” version of the tool that doesn’t use your data for training.
Student Activity: Transcribe a Video
Let’s practice without needing a live meeting:
Find a short (3-5 minute) educational video on YouTube.
Open Google Gemini or Harpa AI.
Use the prompt: “Watch this video/read this transcript and give me a bulleted list of the 5 most important facts mentioned.”
Notice how you can “read” a 5-minute video in just 30 seconds.
Key Takeaway: Your job in a meeting is to think and contribute, not to be a stenographer. Let the AI handle the recording while you handle the ideas.
