Sample Output

What the Execution Brief Generator produces.

Below is a real example: a short messy meeting transcript run through the workflow. The output shows how the tool identifies risks, flags unconfirmed dependencies, and separates decisions that were made from decisions that still need to happen.

Input

The transcript

A short project status call between two team members. Ten exchanges. No formal agenda. Typical of how real project meetings actually run.

John: The equipment vendor confirmed delivery for sometime next month.
Sarah: Did they give us a specific date?
John: Not yet, we’re still waiting on that.
Sarah: We need that date before we can schedule the install team.
John: Right, I’ll follow up with them this week.
Sarah: Also the permits — where are we on those?
John: I was told they’re approved but I haven’t seen the paperwork.
Sarah: That needs to be confirmed before we break ground.
John: Agreed, I’ll check on that too.
Sarah: Okay so John is following up on both. Let’s reconnect Thursday.

Vague language    Secondhand/unverified claim

Output

The execution brief

Delivered by email within 60 seconds of form submission.

1. Transcript Quality Check

Speakers clearly identified. Decisions minimally stated. Action items partially stated — tasks present but no formal deadlines or acceptance criteria. Permit approval is secondhand. Rating: Usable with gaps.

2. Executive Brief

  • Equipment vendor has not confirmed a specific delivery date. Install team scheduling is blocked.
  • Permit approval was reported secondhand — no documentation seen by either party. Ground-breaking is explicitly held pending confirmation.
  • John committed to following up on both items “this week” — no specific date, no deliverable defined.
  • Thursday reconnect proposed by Sarah. John did not explicitly confirm.
  • This meeting did not produce confirmed decisions — only two informal follow-up commitments and a proposed check-in.

5. Risks

High Severity

Permit approval is unverified — based solely on secondhand report.

Evidence: John: “I was told they’re approved but I haven’t seen the paperwork.” Impact: Breaking ground could be delayed or halted; potential compliance exposure. Recommended: John to obtain and share permit documentation before any ground-breaking is scheduled.

High Severity

Equipment delivery date unknown. Install scheduling blocked.

Evidence: John: “Not yet, we’re still waiting on that.” Impact: No delivery date means no downstream scheduling can begin. Recommended: Obtain specific written delivery date from vendor this week; escalate if vendor cannot commit.

6. Dependencies

DependencyNeeded FromBlocksStatus
Specific equipment delivery dateEquipment vendor (external)Install team schedulingUnconfirmed
Permit approval documentationPermitting authority (unnamed)Breaking groundUnconfirmed

9. Follow-Up Message Draft

Subject: Project — Follow-Up from Today’s Discussion

Hi John and Sarah,

Thanks for the quick sync. Here is where things stand:

Confirmed Next Steps

  • John is following up with the equipment vendor this week to obtain a specific delivery date.
  • John is checking on the permit approval and obtaining documentation.
  • We are reconnecting Thursday to review both items.

Items to Confirm

  • Specific day this week for John’s follow-ups. “This week” needs a hard date before Thursday.
  • For permits: who issued the verbal approval, and what documentation is required before breaking ground?
  • Thursday reconnect: time, format, and confirmed attendees.

Integrity Note

Speaker authority levels are not established in this transcript. Ownership assignments are based solely on verbal commitments. Permit approval chain is entirely unverified and should not be treated as confirmed.

Note: This is a shortened sample showing selected sections. The full execution brief includes all nine sections.

This is what your meeting transcripts can produce.

$49 standard. $79 Pro with dual-model cross-check. One-time purchase.