Jeff Feiwell  pfp
Jeff Feiwell
@hyper
Do you take meeting notes? 1 - yes frequently 2 - sometimes 3 - no Pls comment how you take them and how you end up using them
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huugo pfp
huugo
@huugo.eth
Yes, frequently. It’s an important catalogue of decisions/approvals in my work and becomes a record of truth if any litigation were to happen. The “how” is the problem. I can’t find a workflow I like. Might start in textedit, word, notion; ends up as a pdf to the client.
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Nicholas Charriere pfp
Nicholas Charriere
@pushix
1 Been seeing people use an app called firefly.ai which automates it. Very interesting. I like pen and paper so I can diagram.
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Colin pfp
Colin
@colin
I aggressively take notes for most meetings and I’ve been doing this for years. I have a notion db containing entries for every person I meet with, and create a new sub header in the entry for every meeting. I use them for creating action items, reminders to follow up, as a knowledgebase, etc
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Chad🎩 pfp
Chad🎩
@chad
lol this is what i do for a living 😩😩
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bennet pfp
bennet
@bgrill.eth
hand written => memory retention https://warpcast.com/bgrill/0x324a71
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↑ j4ck 🥶 icebreaker.xyz ↑ pfp
↑ j4ck 🥶 icebreaker.xyz ↑
@j4ck.eth
1 we have a notion template where we click a button and it generates a new note with date and who created we pipe it into slack and it’s a great way to keep up with meetings others are having
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Sam Iglesias pfp
Sam Iglesias
@sam
I take notes mostly as a gesture that I’m listening. I’m usually able to retain most of the important facts without consulting them again, but once in a while I do (like names or project codes).
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Chicago 🎩 pfp
Chicago 🎩
@chicago
Every time Use to take them transcript style Now I use fellow.app so much more high level
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Joe Petrich 🟪 pfp
Joe Petrich 🟪
@jpetrich
1, same as @colin. Lately I've been experimenting with taking notes after using rewind.ai to refresh my memory but I don't think I like that as much because the notes give me valuable feedback in realtime about what might need more discussion or a clear decision.
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ted (not lasso) pfp
ted (not lasso)
@ted
1, same answer as @colin almost word for word :)
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Mac Budkowski ᵏ pfp
Mac Budkowski ᵏ
@macbudkowski
I use otter.ai for transcriptions
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Renee Bigelow pfp
Renee Bigelow
@reneeb
For high-level meetings, customer interviews and brainstorming I always run transcription software. For all meetings (except when I am running a workshop or formally presenting) I take physical notes too. Reminders, action items, high-level concepts. I refer back to them often.
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pugson pfp
pugson
@pugson
no
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Matthew pfp
Matthew
@matthew
2. I only write down action items and things I must remember. The lesson of tools like Roam is that people almost never go back and read their notes later. Better to focus the attention on the person I'm speaking to.
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Connor McCormick ☀️ pfp
Connor McCormick ☀️
@nor
1
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moritz 💧🔑 pfp
moritz 💧🔑
@moritz
1 - always, mostly just a few bullet points on Notion more important than summary notes are prep notes for me though, i.e. structuring meeting and making sure I cover everything I want
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Max Jackson pfp
Max Jackson
@mxjxn.eth
yeah if you havent taken notes, you shouldnt have had the meeting
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Brent Fitzgerald pfp
Brent Fitzgerald
@bf
No but my cat is an excellent stenographer.
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Carlos Matallín pfp
Carlos Matallín
@matallo.eth
I write the main takeaways on paper but not necessarily get back to them. Sometimes they are useful, especially for prioritizing
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