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Second Brain / Knowledge Graph for Freelancers

One Brain for Every Hat You Wear

Every client, every project, every detail — one place to ask.

When you're running three client projects at once, context is everything — and losing it is expensive. You forget what was agreed on a call, mix up feedback from different clients, or waste 20 minutes hunting through Slack threads for a single decision. Beckett keeps it all connected.

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How Beckett helps Freelancers

1

Every client relationship has full context, always

Beckett builds a knowledge graph that connects people to projects, projects to notes, notes to decisions, and decisions to outcomes. When you start a call with a client, you can ask Beckett for everything relevant in 10 seconds — what you last discussed, what's outstanding, what they care about. No more scrambling before meetings.

2

"What did they say about X?" is a question you can actually answer

Verbal agreements, scattered Slack messages, email threads — important context gets lost everywhere. If you log what clients tell you as you go, Beckett surfaces it on demand. "What did Sarah say about the timeline for the logo project?" gets you the actual note, not a vague memory.

3

Switch between clients without losing your thread

Context-switching is the core tax of freelancing. Beckett lets you move from one client to another and immediately get grounded — open tasks, recent conversations, and current status for any project you're working on. The mental load of juggling clients drops significantly when the context lives outside your head.

Frequently asked questions

Notion and CRMs require you to build and maintain a structure — you have to decide where things go, keep it updated, and remember to check it. Beckett is conversational: you tell it things as they happen and ask it questions when you need them. It builds the structure behind the scenes. Most freelancers maintain Notion for about two months before it turns into a graveyard.

Yes — Beckett automatically associates notes with the people and projects you mention. When you say "add a note for the Meridian project," it goes there. Over time you can see everything attached to a client, a project, or a person — and the connections between them.

You can log invoices, payment status, and amounts with Beckett — "Invoice #004 sent to Holloway for $3,500, net 30" — and it will track and resurface that information. It's not accounting software, but it's a reliable place to log and query payment status across clients without maintaining a spreadsheet.

Yes. You can paste notes, summaries, or context from other tools directly into Beckett and it will process and store them. Many freelancers do a one-time migration of their most important client notes when they start.

Absolutely — even with one client, the value is in never losing context between sessions. The knowledge graph compounds over time: the longer you use Beckett, the richer the context it holds, and the more useful it becomes as a reference when you're preparing proposals, scoping renewals, or onboarding collaborators.

I want every client detail in one place I can actually search.

Beckett builds your knowledge graph from every conversation — clients, projects, and decisions, all connected.

See what Beckett can do