There's an experiment anyone can run tomorrow in their next meeting: record the session on your phone while you take notes as usual. Then compare what you wrote with what was actually said.
The gap is systematic. And it's brutal.
The switching cost nobody measures
Every time your brain shifts from listening to writing and back to listening, it pays a task-switching cost. Cognitive load studies place that cost between 200 and 500 ms per transition. In a 60-minute meeting with 120 transitions, that's 4 to 10 minutes of lost time. And that's if the transitions were clean — they aren't.
The expensive part isn't the time. It's what you don't hear while you write.
The three losses
- Loss of nuance: a "this worries me" said hesitantly disappears in the notes. All that remains is "Juan has a concern."
- Loss of early objections: when someone raises a doubt while you're writing the previous point, it gets swallowed.
- Loss of opportunities: the questions you don't ask because you're busy writing.
The real alternative
It isn't "don't take notes." It's delegating notes to something that never needs to stop listening. A human can't. A recording + AI can.
AudioMap is built on this premise. Your only job during the meeting is to be present. Structured notes, detected tasks, and the chat with the conversation come after — when you can think without interrupting yourself.
What to do tomorrow
- Hit record at the start of your next meeting.
- Close the notebook.
- Look the speaker in the eye.
- You'll see the difference in the decisions you make.