Morning Briefing (Proactive Engine) for Executives
Fully Briefed Before Your First Sip of Coffee
Every morning, fully briefed. Zero scrambling.
Your first meeting is at 8:30 and you haven't had time to think. You're jumping between Slack, email, calendar, and news tabs, half-prepped for everything and fully prepped for nothing. By 9am you're already behind — and the day compounds from there.
Example conversations
How Beckett helps Executives
Walk into every morning meeting fully prepared
Beckett's briefing includes a digest of your first meeting of the day — who's attending, what you last discussed, any open items, and relevant context it's tracked about those people. You stop walking into rooms cold. You walk in like you've been thinking about this for an hour, even when your morning just started.
One briefing replaces five tabs
Weather, calendar, priority tasks, and news about companies you track — all synthesized into one clear morning read. Beckett knows your priorities because you've told it over time: the deal you're working on, the competitor you're watching, the team member going through a hard quarter. Your briefing isn't generic. It's tuned to you.
Protect your decision-making energy from the start
Executives make hundreds of micro-decisions before 10am. Beckett reduces the cognitive overhead by surfacing what matters and suppressing what doesn't. When you know the landscape before the day begins, you lead with intention instead of reaction. The difference shows — in how you run meetings, how you prioritize, and how your team reads you.
Frequently asked questions
Beckett learns from what you track. When you mention a company you're watching, a competitor, or a person in the news, it files that and monitors for relevant updates. You can also explicitly tell it: 'Track news about Apex Technologies and the Series B market.' Over time it builds a list that reflects your actual priorities, not an algorithm's guess at them.
Yes — Beckett delivers a morning briefing proactively each weekday. You can also ask for it on demand at any time: 'What's my day look like?' pulls the same briefing in real time.
Yes. Beckett integrates with Google Calendar so your real meeting schedule appears in the briefing, not just tasks you've told Beckett about manually. It also pulls attendee context from your people database — so if you've ever logged anything about someone on your calendar, it surfaces before the meeting.
Beckett isn't a replacement for an executive assistant — it's the layer your EA doesn't have time for. The personal context you'd never ask someone else to track: what you're stressed about, what you told a client six months ago, the habit you're trying to build. It works alongside your EA and handles the self-management and memory layer they can't.
You can have a working briefing in under 10 minutes. Connect your Google Calendar and tell Beckett a few things you want to track. The briefing gets smarter the more context you give it over the first week — but it's genuinely useful on day one.
I want to walk into every morning fully prepared.
Beckett delivers your daily briefing so you lead with clarity, not scrambling.
See what Beckett can do