Why QuickScribe
AI notes for people who still want to have normal phone calls.
The world does not need another meeting bot quietly joining calls. It needs a simple, low-cost way to turn recorded conversations into useful notes.
Consent-first
People appreciate being asked.
A recording does not have to feel sneaky. QuickScribe is built around a simple professional habit: ask permission, record intentionally, and turn the recording into useful notes afterward.
Phone-call native
Not every important conversation happens on Zoom.
Recruiters, sales reps, founders, and customer success teams still live on regular phone calls. QuickScribe works with the recordings you already have, whether they come from iPhone, Android, Zoom, Teams, or a voice memo app.
No meeting bot
No awkward AI guest in the room.
Meeting bots can be useful, but they can also feel invasive. QuickScribe stays out of the call. You control the recording and send it only when you want notes created.
Structured output
A transcript is not the deliverable.
Raw transcripts still leave work behind. QuickScribe turns calls into recruiter scorecards, sales notes, customer success summaries, or clean general meeting notes.
The consent-first workflow
Ask permission. Then let the notes take care of themselves.
This is especially important in places with stricter recording laws and in any conversation where trust matters. QuickScribe does not make legal promises, but it does encourage the right professional behavior.
Use this script
“Do you mind if I record this so I can focus on the conversation instead of typing notes? I will only use it to create my follow-up summary.”
Simple. Transparent. Professional.
How it compares
QuickScribe is intentionally boring.
Meeting bots
Visible, sometimes awkward, tied to calendar meetings
Enterprise AI notes
Powerful, expensive, and built around video platforms
QuickScribe
Record any call, email the audio, get useful notes back
No bot. No dashboard chore. Just notes from calls.
Try it with your next recorded phone call.