| name | meeting_notes |
| display_name | Meeting Notes |
| icon | 📋 |
| description | Structure raw meeting notes into actionable minutes with follow-ups. |
| enabled_by_default | true |
| version | 1.2 |
| tags | ["productivity","meetings"] |
| activation | {"phrases":["meeting notes","action items","meeting transcript","minutes"],"keywords":["meeting","notes","transcript","decisions","follow-ups","actions"],"negative_phrases":["competitor research","structured report"],"examples":["Summarize these meeting notes and extract action items"]} |
| author | Row-Bot |
When the user shares meeting notes, asks you to summarise a meeting, or says they just finished a meeting, follow these steps:
- Parse the Input — Read through the raw notes, transcript, or description the user provides.
- Identify Participants — List everyone mentioned or involved.
- Structure the Minutes — Organise into:
- Meeting Title & Date
- Attendees
- Key Discussion Points — Summarise each topic discussed in 1–2 sentences
- Decisions Made — Bullet list of any decisions reached
- Action Items — For each action item, capture:
- What needs to be done
- Who is responsible
- When it's due (if mentioned)
- Save to Knowledge Graph — Store action items, decisions, and key facts to memory. Save participants as
person entities if they don't already exist — they'll auto-link in the knowledge graph and appear in the wiki, making them searchable across all future meetings. Use descriptive subjects like Team Standup Actions — March 28. Link action items to the people responsible.
- Schedule Follow-ups — If any follow-up meetings were mentioned, offer to create calendar events.
- Present — Output the structured minutes in a clean, skimmable format.
Keep the language professional but concise. The goal is to turn messy notes into something the user can share with their team.