Daily Briefing. Context, before coffee.

Reads your overnight email, team standup notes, calendar, and industry news. Hands you a one-page briefing at 6am. So your first meeting starts with context, not catching up.

~10 min
to read
06:00
delivered by
5 sources
synthesized
Tuesday Morning Briefing
May 7, 2026 · 06:00
delivered
Email overnight
147 threads · 6 need you
Q3 renewal at Northwind · vendor pricing change · 3 sales escalations
Your team today
3 shipping · 2 stuck · 1 waiting on you
Sara waiting on signoff for Q3 brief · Karim stuck on integration spec
Calendar
2 changes since Friday
Investor sync moved to 14:00 · QBR pulled forward to 10:00
Industry
1 item that affects your business
EU Trade Compliance update due July 1 · impacts your supply chain
Your priorities today
3 decisions queued
Northwind renewal · vendor pricing · Q3 board prep
How you read it
Email at 06:00
Slack DM
Voice on commute
Internal dashboard
Calibrated to you
2 wks
to learn your priorities
What you read
What you skip
Topics flaggedtuned
Better every week

Walking in half-informed.

9am leadership meeting starts
Your sales head mentions a thread you didn’t see. Your ops lead references a vendor change you missed. You spend the first 15 minutes catching up.
Industry shifts you missed
Regulation changed. A competitor announced something. Your team finds out before you do. You learn about it in the meeting.
Calendar moved overnight
Two reschedules happened while you were asleep. Your day looks different than your phone said it would. You replan from scratch.
Decisions made without you
Things shipped, things stalled, things waited. You wanted to weigh in but the moment passed. Now you’re reacting, not deciding.
How it works

Three steps. Every weekday at 6am.

01

Watches overnight

Email, Slack, your team’s status updates, calendar changes, news sources you care about. Anything that changed while you slept.

02

Synthesizes

Pulls signal from noise. Groups by what matters: email, team, calendar, industry, your priorities. Decides what makes the cut.

The output
03

Hands you one page

Email, dashboard, Slack, voice — whichever you prefer. Ten minutes to read. You walk in already oriented.

Pulls from

Wherever your information lives.

Email
Gmail · Outlook
Chat
Slack · Teams
Calendar
Google · O365
Tasks
Asana · Linear
News
RSS · APIs
Custom
Internal tools
In the wild

Same textile CEO. Now: 10 minutes, then he’s ahead.

Manufacturing · runs alongside Email-to-Task

The email-to-task agent clears his inbox overnight. The briefing agent tells him what happened while it was clearing it.

By 6am, a one-page summary lands in his inbox. Overnight emails grouped by theme. His team’s status from Slack and standups. Supplier pricing changes. Compliance news affecting textile export. Two or three items flagged: “you should decide on this today.”

His team stopped scheduling morning check-ins with him. They stopped because he stopped needing them.

Outcomes
10 min
to read every morning
Before 6am
delivery, every weekday
3 fewer
morning check-ins / week
Questions we get

FAQ.

How long to set up?

One to two weeks. Week one we figure out what sources matter and how you make decisions. Week two we build, test, and tune.

What format does the briefing come in?

Your choice. Email between 5:30 and 6am. Internal dashboard. Slack DM. Voice on the commute. We build to how you actually consume information.

How does it know what’s important to me?

Week one, you tell us. The agent starts conservative — tending to include more than less. We tune based on what you skim past versus what you read closely. Calibrated within 2-3 weeks.

Can I change what’s in the briefing later?

Yes, continuously. Priorities change, briefing changes. Big changes (new source, new format) go through a quick conversation. Small changes happen automatically based on signals.

Want to walk in already briefed?

Book a 15-minute call. We’ll ask about your mornings and show you what a briefing for your business would look like.

We reply within 4 working hours · no sales pitch · no spam