Turn Meetings and Calls into Searchable Notes and Transcripts

Turn Zoom, Google Meet, Microsoft Teams, Loom, and call recordings into accurate meeting transcripts, searchable playback, cited answers, key takeaways, and notes your team can share.

No credit card required.·Pay only for what you use.

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Real output from a real transcription

Browse chapters, ask questions, and explore search results from an actual transcript.

Real OutputTry Demo
44 Harsh Truths About The Game Of Life - Naval Ravikant (4K)
Chris Williamson
Contents
8 chapters · 513 topics
1Happiness Versus Success: Philosophical Reflections on Contentment, Desire, and Motivation
2Optimizing Sleep: Smart Temperature Regulation and the Foundations of Self-Esteem
3Decisive Action and Iterative Practice: Keys to Optimal Choices and Mastery
4Wealth Management: From Materialism to Value Creation and Fair Compensation
5Evaluating LLMs: Capabilities, Limitations, and Their Role in AI's Evolving Landscape
6Pathogens, Evolution, and Knowledge: How Humans Adapt and Defend
7Agency, Power, and the Individual: From Child Development to Cultural Conflict
8Unseen Trends: Media Oversights, Medical Limitations, and the Primitive State of Modern Biology
Q&A preview
Answer
Naval explains two distinct paths to happiness using the story of Alexander and Diogenes. The first path is through success—conquering the world, satisfying material needs, and getting what you want. The second path, exemplified by Diogenes living in a barrel, is simply not wanting in the first place. As Socrates said when shown luxuries: 'How many things there are in this world that I do not want.' Naval suggests not wanting something is as good as having it—both paths lead to the same destination of contentment [00:38–01:10]. He's not sure which path is more valid, noting it depends on how you define success [01:10–01:25].

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Summaries are useful — until someone asks 'where exactly did they say that?'

  • A polished recap cannot tell you the exact wording a prospect used
  • Rewatching calls to verify a detail wastes more time than the meeting
  • Single-engine tools are less accurate for multilingual teams
  • Meeting notes live and die in one tool — no search across your archive

What you get with searchable meeting transcripts

Accurate transcripts

Pick the best speech-to-text model for your language. GPT-4o Transcribe for diarized calls, Qwen3-ASR-Flash for long meetings, Voxtral for cost-sensitive bulk processing.

AI Q&A with citations

Ask 'what did the prospect say about pricing?' and get an answer tied to the exact second. Click the citation to jump to the moment in playback.

Searchable playback

Semantic search across your entire call archive. Find where a competitor, objection, pricing question, or next step came up.

Key takeaways and chapters

Auto-generated summary, takeaways, and a navigable chapter spine for long calls. Copy as markdown into Notion, Slack, or your CRM.

Speaker identification

GPT-4o Transcribe labels who said what. Essential for calls, demos, and interviews with multiple speakers.

Shareable notes with evidence

Share notes that link back to the exact moment in the recording. Handoffs, deal reviews, and coaching loops backed by the source.

What people use this for

  • Upload Zoom, Google Meet, or Teams recordings for searchable transcripts
  • Ask 'what did the prospect say about competitor X?' with cited answers
  • Build a searchable archive of every sales call and customer interview
  • Share notes with your team backed by timestamped evidence
  • Coach reps by jumping to the exact moment an objection came up

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

The best tool for multilingual teams is one that lets you choose the strongest speech-to-text model per language, instead of running a single ASR engine across every meeting. Transcribe.so gives you multi-model selection with GPT-4o Transcribe, Qwen3-ASR-Flash, Voxtral, and more.

AI meeting notes usually means an automatically generated summary and action items. Meeting transcription is the full, timed record of everything that was said. Notes compress; transcription preserves. Teams that need to verify what was said need transcription underneath the notes.

Yes. Transcribe.so provides semantic search and AI Q&A across your entire recording archive. Reps and managers can find exactly where a competitor, objection, pricing question, or next step came up — with timestamped citations.

Transcribe.so is currently recording-first: bring your Zoom, Google Meet, Microsoft Teams, or Loom recordings and get accurate transcripts and cited answers. Live join is on the roadmap.

Transcribe.so is free to try with no credit card required. After the free trial, pricing is pay-per-minute with no per-seat fees — usually friendlier for variable-volume teams than seat-based subscriptions.

Ready to make your meetings searchable?

Upload a Zoom, Meet, or Teams recording. Pick the best model for your language. Find decisions, answers, and exact moments in seconds.