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CommentaryGoogle

Google Meet exec on the knowledge engine hiding in your calendar: meetings become IP

By
Awaneesh Verma
Awaneesh Verma
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By
Awaneesh Verma
Awaneesh Verma
Down Arrow Button Icon
January 16, 2026, 9:05 AM ET
Awaneesh Verma is Senior Director of Product, Real Time Communication, Google.
verma
Awaneesh Verma, Senior Director of Product, Real Time Communication.courtesy of Google

Meetings are the dark energy of business: common, powerful, and largely invisible. The reasoning and judgments that shape a company’s direction happen in meetings, but then disappear. Email turned situational communication into organizational working memory; AI is now doing the same for meetings, making conversations usable beyond the meeting itself. It turns meetings from moments in time to a new kind of organizational asset.

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Beyond the Transcript

Meetings contain information that rarely makes it into a formal system: how a leader weighs trade-offs, why a decision went one way instead of another, who deferred to whom, and how objections were resolved. Companies treat strategy documents as critical intellectual property, but the central decision-making process is just as valuable, and harder to capture. Leaders often try to approximate this in writing, but it rarely captures how decisions actually unfold.

The IP of leadership happens in the meeting room. And then it’s gone. 

There is also the simple loss we already feel: decisions made but not recorded. Commitments that fade. Debates rehashed because people forget, not just what was decided, but how. Manual meeting notes are subjective and record only a small portion of this. Even complete transcripts aren’t very useful in capturing meeting meaning; the important information is rarely synthesized, analyzed, or distributed. 

Many people today use AI to summarize meeting recordings and generate (and sometimes share) useful meeting data: who’s on the hook for what, where the disagreements were, who had convincing arguments, and what the agenda should include in the next meeting. This, however, is just the beginning of AI’s application to meetings. All this information can benefit a business on a much larger scale.

Business Value

The information in unrecorded meetings begins melting once the meeting ends.  AI extraction, though, solidifies it into foundational data. Decisions, rationales, and patterns become durable. Their knowledge value stacks like bricks, not ice cubes. For the first time, what gets said in meetings becomes knowledge that an organization can actually build on – just as email made everyday communication archival and durable. 

We can combine this data with the rest of what an organization knows: its documents, CRM, email, and contracts. This joining is where new value surfaces. When meeting intelligence flows into the same corpus as everything else, its signals become amplified.

Some organizations are doing this today. At a large payments and financial services company, leaders aggregate team and customer meeting recordings to analyze patterns across conversations, to surface emerging needs and product ideas that would be difficult or impossible to spot meeting by meeting. Instead of relying on anecdotal recollection, leadership looks across interactions to understand shifting customer signals to inform product development. 

A recurring executive decision-making meeting can become a living archive not just of what decisions are made, but also of how they are made: what kind of arguments and data factor in. It can lead to smoother and more aligned decisions across the company.  As organizations begin systematically capturing meeting intelligence, team dynamics will shift. At first, decision re-litigation decreases, because the capability preserves reasoning. Onboarding accelerates, because new hires can see how the team actually thinks, not just the written policies. 

Individuals adopt AI meeting transcribers because they make their meetings better. But the business value is much larger than better meetings; it is organizational knowledge that we can build on.

What Leaders Should Do Now

Every durable knowledge system eventually reshapes how decisions are made and how work gets done. Consider how email changed the shape of work. AI meeting intelligence will follow the same path, and leaders can accelerate the transition. 

Left to individual adoption, meeting intelligence can stay fragmented. The value, while significant, remains confined to productivity, short of business transformation. The strategic payoff doesn’t materialize. 

To unlock the business value of meeting intelligence, leaders need to treat meeting capture as infrastructure, not as a tool some employees happen to use. When capture, recap, and sharing normalize across the organization, early benefits follow: more transparent accountability, less rework, and better decision follow-through. 

The transformation starts by providing AI meeting tools, explaining their direct benefits to employees, and encouraging their use. At first, the benefits of widespread AI use for capture, recap, and sharing should lead to a growing accountability culture and other employee benefits, such as reduced rework and easier follow-through.

Treating meeting capture as infrastructure means more than using it to improve meeting productivity for individuals and teams. When meeting intelligence is captured consistently, organizations can apply AI analysis to that data to discern business cause-and-effect across decisions, debates, and trade-offs.

This kind of synthesis needs a shared, reliable base of meeting data to draw on. The companies that start capturing meeting data now will be positioned to use advanced analysis as tools mature; those that leave meeting AI tools to individuals and teams won’t have the shared context to build on.

Second, we need to decide how meeting information should be shared and used. We have navigated similar questions with email and documents: as soon as a new form of knowledge becomes durable, norms and governance follow. The same will happen here. 

Meeting data will only become an enterprise asset if people understand how it is being used and can see benefits for themselves. We must be thoughtful about what’s being captured, how it’s retained, and how we manage access. When these choices are clear, meeting intelligence is more likely to strengthen collaboration and analysis, rather than create friction. 

Finally, leaders need to be deliberate about building processes that visibly leverage this new asset. The opportunity is not just capturing conversations, it’s building new rhythms that convert into reusable guidance, behaviors, and institutional memory.

From Ephemeral to Enduring

Managing cumulative meeting intelligence is new territory. There’s no established playbook for how to synthesize it or build on it over time. The organizations that figure this out first will compound their advantage, just as the companies that quickly transitioned to email did. Those that don’t will keep losing the same knowledge they’ve always lost – just with better transcripts. 

This transition won’t happen on its own. It requires leaders who recognize that meetings have crossed from ephemeral to durable, and who are ready to build the systems and culture to capture that value.

The opinions expressed in Fortune.com commentary pieces are solely the views of their authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and beliefs of Fortune.

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By Awaneesh Verma
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