Feature
Live meeting transcription that stays inside the manager workflow
EvalSuite captures live transcript context inside its own rooms, keeps saved transcript snippets visible in the workspace, and feeds that transcript into recap drafting, action-item suggestions, and saved meeting history.
Why teams care
Capture live transcript context in EvalSuite rooms and shared syncs, then reuse it for recap, action items, and follow-through.
- Live transcript capture for EvalSuite 1:1s and shared syncs
- Saved transcript snippets stay visible inside the meeting workspace
- Transcript context powers recap drafts and reviewable follow-up suggestions
Make the live conversation useful later
A transcript is only valuable when it improves what happens after the call. EvalSuite uses transcript context to help draft recaps, suggest follow-up action items, and preserve important turns in saved meeting history.
That keeps the conversation connected to the rest of the coaching loop instead of turning meeting intelligence into a separate note archive.
Built for real meeting churn
Live rooms are messy. People join, leave, reconnect, mute, and resume. EvalSuite ships transcript capture as part of the room lifecycle so capture starts with the room, stops when the room ends, and survives ordinary reconnect patterns better than a brittle bolt-on note-taker.
- Transcript capture follows room connection and rejoin state
- Saved transcript viewer stays available inside the live workspace
- Shared sync rooms reuse the same transcript pipeline as manager 1:1s
Keep humans in charge of follow-through
Transcript-derived action items remain reviewable drafts. Managers decide what becomes a real commitment, what gets dismissed, and what should carry forward into the next session.
Current scope is EvalSuite rooms and shared sync rooms. Zoom RTMS transcript capture and an in-Zoom coach are not shipped.
Turn live conversation into durable coaching context
EvalSuite helps managers capture the meeting once, then reuse that context for recap, follow-through, and later review writing.