BriefMe reads the last 30 days of email threads between you and your meeting attendees — and puts the relevant ones right in your brief. The thing someone mentioned two weeks ago? You'll see it before they bring it up.
5 free briefs/month · Read-only Gmail access · No credit card
You're frantically searching Gmail for "Sarah" trying to find that email thread about the contract renewal. You find 43 results. None of them are the right one.
Or worse — you walk in without looking. And halfway through the meeting, you realize Sarah already told you about the budget freeze two weeks ago. In an email you never caught.
BriefMe catches it. Before the meeting. Automatically.
Threads scanned automatically
BriefMe searches your Gmail for emails between you and each attendee from the last 30 days.
Relevance-ranked summaries
The most relevant threads are surfaced first. You see what matters, not a wall of inbox noise.
Timeline context
Timestamps included so you know if something is fresh or from three weeks ago.
Email context is useful for everyone — but it's essential for a few specific situations.
You talk to 30 people a week. BriefMe remembers what you discussed with each one so you don't have to.
No time to prep. BriefMe does it in the background while you're in the meeting before.
Remember exactly what you pitched, what they pushed back on, and what you promised to follow up on.
Walk into every client call knowing the full history of the relationship — not just what happened last week.
Surface every email with a candidate before the next interview round. Nothing falls through the cracks.
7+ meetings today? BriefMe handles the email archaeology. You handle the meetings.
BriefMe only searches for emails between you and the specific attendees of each meeting you generate a brief for. It never reads unrelated emails.
No. Read-only access. BriefMe cannot send, delete, or modify any emails.
Gmail is fully supported today. Outlook / Microsoft 365 email integration is coming soon.
The last 30 days of email threads by default. This covers most active relationships without surfacing irrelevant old context.