AI Morning Briefing
A personalized daily briefing that pulls together your calendar, open tasks, priorities, and any context you need for the day — delivered in a format that actually helps you start well. Not a generic news digest, but a focused look at your day built from your own life data. The kind of start that used to require a dedicated executive assistant.
Frequently asked questions
A useful morning briefing covers: what's on your calendar today (with any prep you need), your highest-priority tasks, anything time-sensitive that arrived overnight, and any context that's relevant to your day. The best briefings are concise — they give you what you need to orient and act, not a wall of information to process.
Checking your phone is reactive and fragmented — you're consuming notifications, not getting oriented. An AI morning briefing is proactive and synthesized: it pulls the relevant signal from your calendar, tasks, messages, and priorities and presents it as a coherent picture of your day. You're in control of the agenda rather than being pulled by incoming information.
Yes, for a specific reason: decision fatigue is highest later in the day. Starting with a clear picture of your priorities — instead of building that picture incrementally as the day unfolds — means you make better choices earlier and spend less energy on orientation throughout the day. Clarity at the start compounds.
The most useful briefings are deeply personalized: they know which projects are active, which tasks you've been deferring, which meetings need preparation, and which relationships are due for attention. An AI that has been accumulating your context over time can surface connections and priorities that a generic tool never would.
This varies by person, but the most effective timing is after you've done your first routine (showered, had coffee) but before you've opened your email or started reacting to the day. Format-wise, short and scannable beats comprehensive and thorough — you want to read the whole thing in 2 minutes, not be tempted to skip it because it's long.
Start every day knowing exactly what matters
Beckett briefs you on your day — calendar, tasks, priorities — in 60 seconds.
See what Beckett can do