Your standup ends.
The work starts.
Notarail listens to your daily sync and pulls out every commitment — who said they'd do it, by when, and where it needs to land. Action items arrive in Jira, Linear, Notion, or Asana before the call window closes.
Transcripts don't ship code.
Action items do.
- Nobody re-reads a 45-minute transcript. The context window closes the moment the call ends.
- "Follow up on that" disappears by afternoon. Ownership without a name attached is no ownership at all.
- Distributed teams need clarity, not more text. Time zones multiply the cost of every ambiguous handoff.
Three steps from standup to shipped
Notarail isn't another place to check. It pushes structured output into the tools your team already uses. Nothing to revisit, nothing to copy-paste.
Connect
Authorize the Notarail bot for Zoom, Google Meet, or Microsoft Teams. Link your Jira, Linear, Notion, or Asana workspace. One-time setup — recurring meetings are handled automatically from that point.
Meet
Notarail joins the call and builds a speaker map in the first two minutes. From there it tracks commitments, blockers, and decisions in real time — flagging anything that sounds like an action item with an implicit or explicit owner.
Ship
The extracted items are pushed to your project tool with the owner's name, a resolved due date, and a brief context note. By the time the call ends, the work is already in someone's queue.
Extraction, not transcription
Owner assignment
Implicit ownership is where accountability dies. Notarail builds a speaker map from your first two minutes on the call and resolves "someone should" into a specific name. Every item ships with a named owner — not a team, not a follow-up thread.
Due date parsing
Notarail resolves relative references against your calendar. "By end of sprint" becomes the sprint close date. "Thursday" becomes a specific date. Items arrive in your project tool with a due date already set — no post-meeting date-hunting.
Integration push
Extracted items are pushed directly to Jira, Linear, Notion, or Asana with full field mapping: assignee, due date, title, and a short context note from the conversation. No stubs that need editing before they're actionable.
Meeting-type templates
Standup output is different from sprint planning output. Notarail detects the meeting type — standup, retro, 1:1, or planning — and applies the matching extraction template. Planning sessions produce epics and tickets; standups produce blocker and next-step items.
From standup to Jira ticket
in 90 seconds
The pipeline runs in three stages: speaker-aware commitment detection during the call, owner and due-date resolution against your team roster and calendar, and a direct API push into your project tool. The transcript is a byproduct — the action-item record is the output that matters.
See full product tourThe handoff that used to break, fixed
"Our Tuesday sync used to generate a doc no one opened. Now it generates 8 Jira tickets that are closed by Friday."
"The owner field is the part that changed everything. Before Notarail, ownership was implicit. Now it is not."
"We cut our meeting count by 30 percent. Once items actually moved between calls, we stopped needing status check-ins on top of standups."