Writing Meeting Notes
Overview
Turn raw notes/transcript into a structured, skimmable record that makes next steps unambiguous.
When to Use
-
Notes are messy, partial, or out of order
-
A transcript exists but no one will read it end-to-end
-
There were decisions, open questions, or action items to track
When NOT to use
- The meeting is purely social with no decisions or follow-ups
Core Pattern
Separate “what happened” from “what’s next”:
-
Summary (context)
-
Decisions (committed outcomes)
-
Action Items (owner + due date)
-
Open Questions / Risks (unresolved)
Quick Reference
Use this template:
-
Attendees:
-
Context: (1–3 bullets)
-
Decisions:
-
Action Items: (each item has Owner, Due, Next step)
-
Open Questions / Risks:
Implementation
-
Scan for explicit decisions (“we will…”, “agreed…”, “we decided…”).
-
Extract actions (“X will do Y by Z”) and assign owners if missing (flag if unknown).
-
Promote unresolved items into Open Questions / Risks.
-
Keep it concise; link to source transcript if needed.
Common Mistakes
-
Burying action items in narrative text — always list separately.
-
Inventing owners/dates — if absent, mark as “Owner: TBD” / “Due: TBD”.