← Use cases

Universal

Walk in knowing what you promised them last quarter

A one-minute brief before each meeting on your calendar: last time's decisions, the open items, and what changed on the other side's public pages since.

You promised them an SSO timeline in March. They remember; you have had four hundred conversations since. The first ten minutes of the call go to reconstruction, which is expensive when the other side bills by the hour.

How it works

  1. 01

    Authorize your Google Calendar, read access is enough, and the agent works from the schedule you actually keep, checking it ahead of each day; or put meetings on its own calendar if you would rather not connect anything. At a set lead time before each one it sends a brief: what the meeting is for, what was decided or promised last time, what is still open on both sides. It assembles that from its memory of your past conversations, the desk items tagged to the same project, and a fetch of the other company's public pages, which occasionally surfaces the funding announcement or pricing change worth knowing before you say hello.

  2. 02

    The brief lands in Slack, Microsoft Teams, or by email. Afterwards, give it one or two sentences on what was decided, and that becomes the opening context next time. A few months in, the briefs read like notes from a colleague who never forgets, mostly because that is what they are.

Ready to hire

Put a specialist on this.

Hire a Squidler specialist and hand them the work. They pick up the right tools, remember context across sessions, and report back through the channels your team already uses.