Claude Code Plugins

Community-maintained marketplace

Feedback

notion-meeting-intelligence

@gotalab/skillport
93
0

Prepares meeting materials by gathering context from Notion, enriching with Claude research, and creating both an internal pre-read and external agenda saved to Notion. Helps you arrive prepared with comprehensive background and structured meeting docs.

Install Skill

1Download skill
2Enable skills in Claude

Open claude.ai/settings/capabilities and find the "Skills" section

3Upload to Claude

Click "Upload skill" and select the downloaded ZIP file

Note: Please verify skill by going through its instructions before using it.

SKILL.md

name notion-meeting-intelligence
description Prepares meeting materials by gathering context from Notion, enriching with Claude research, and creating both an internal pre-read and external agenda saved to Notion. Helps you arrive prepared with comprehensive background and structured meeting docs.
metadata [object Object]

Meeting Intelligence

Prepares you for meetings by gathering context from Notion, enriching it with Claude research, and creating comprehensive meeting materials. Generates both an internal pre-read for attendees and an external-facing agenda for the meeting itself.

Quick Start

When asked to prep for a meeting:

  1. Gather Notion context: Use Notion:notion-search to find related pages
  2. Fetch details: Use Notion:notion-fetch to read relevant content
  3. Enrich with research: Use Claude's knowledge to add context, industry insights, or best practices
  4. Create internal pre-read: Use Notion:notion-create-pages for background context document (for attendees)
  5. Create external agenda: Use Notion:notion-create-pages for meeting agenda (shared with all participants)
  6. Link resources: Connect both docs to related projects and each other

Meeting Prep Workflow

Step 1: Understand meeting context

Collect meeting details:
- Meeting topic/title
- Attendees (internal team + external participants)
- Meeting purpose (decision, brainstorm, status update, customer demo, etc.)
- Meeting type (internal only vs. external participants)
- Related project/initiative
- Specific topics to cover

Step 2: Search for Notion context

Use Notion:notion-search to find:
- Project pages related to meeting topic
- Previous meeting notes
- Specifications or design docs
- Related tasks or issues
- Recent updates or reports
- Customer/partner information (if applicable)

Search strategies:
- Topic-based: "mobile app redesign"
- Project-scoped: search within project teamspace
- Attendee-created: filter by created_by_user_ids
- Recent updates: use created_date_range filters

Step 3: Fetch and analyze Notion content

For each relevant page:
1. Fetch with Notion:notion-fetch
2. Extract key information:
   - Project status and timeline
   - Recent decisions and updates
   - Open questions or blockers
   - Relevant metrics or data
   - Action items from previous meetings
3. Note gaps in information

Step 4: Enrich with Claude research

Beyond Notion context, add value through:

For technical meetings:
- Explain complex concepts for broader audience
- Summarize industry best practices
- Provide competitive context
- Suggest discussion frameworks

For customer meetings:
- Research company background (if public info)
- Industry trends relevant to discussion
- Common pain points in their sector
- Best practices for similar customers

For decision meetings:
- Decision-making frameworks
- Risk analysis patterns
- Trade-off considerations
- Implementation best practices

Note: Use general knowledge only - don't fabricate specific facts

Step 5: Create internal pre-read

Use Notion:notion-create-pages for internal doc:

Title: "[Meeting Topic] - Pre-Read (Internal)"

Content structure:
- **Meeting Overview**: Date, time, attendees, purpose
- **Background Context**: 
  - What this meeting is about (2-3 sentences)
  - Why it matters (business context)
  - Links to related Notion pages
- **Current Status**: 
  - Where we are now (from Notion content)
  - Recent updates and progress
  - Key metrics or data
- **Context & Insights** (from Claude research):
  - Industry context or best practices
  - Relevant considerations
  - Potential approaches to discuss
- **Key Discussion Points**:
  - Topics that need airtime
  - Open questions to resolve
  - Decisions required
- **What We Need from This Meeting**:
  - Expected outcomes
  - Decisions to make
  - Next steps to define

Audience: Internal attendees only
Purpose: Give team full context and alignment before meeting

Step 6: Create external agenda

Use Notion:notion-create-pages for meeting doc:

Title: "[Meeting Topic] - Agenda"

Content structure:
- **Meeting Details**: Date, time, attendees
- **Objective**: Clear meeting goal (1-2 sentences)
- **Agenda Items** (with time allocations):
  1. Topic 1 (10 min)
  2. Topic 2 (20 min)
  3. Topic 3 (15 min)
- **Discussion Topics**: 
  - Key items to cover
  - Questions to answer
- **Decisions Needed**: 
  - Clear decision points
- **Action Items**: 
  - (To be filled during meeting)
- **Related Resources**:
  - Links to relevant pages
  - Link to pre-read document

Audience: All participants (internal + external)
Purpose: Structure the meeting, keep it on track
Tone: Professional, focused, clear

See reference/template-selection-guide.md for full templates.

Step 7: Link documents

1. Link pre-read to agenda:
   - Add mention in agenda: "See <mention-page>Pre-Read</mention-page> for background"

2. Link both to project:
   - Update project page with meeting links
   - Add to "Meetings" section

3. Cross-reference:
   - Agenda mentions pre-read for internal attendees
   - Pre-read mentions agenda for meeting structure

Document Types

Internal Pre-Read (for team)

More comprehensive, internal context:

  • Full background and history
  • Internal metrics and data
  • Honest assessment of challenges
  • Strategic considerations
  • What we need to achieve
  • Internal discussion points

When to create: Always for important meetings with internal team

External Agenda (for all participants)

Clean, professional, focused:

  • Clear objectives
  • Structured agenda with times
  • Discussion topics
  • Decision items
  • Professional tone

When to create: Every meeting

Agenda Types by Meeting Purpose

Decision Meeting: Meeting Details → Objective → Options (Pros/Cons) → Recommendation → Discussion → Decision → Action Items

Status Update: Meeting Details → Project Status → Progress → Upcoming Work → Blockers → Discussion → Action Items

Customer/External: Meeting Details → Objective → Agenda Items (timed) → Discussion Topics → Next Steps

Brainstorming: Meeting Details → Objective → Constraints → Ideas → Discussion → Next Steps

See reference/template-selection-guide.md for complete templates.

Research Enrichment Patterns

Beyond Notion content, add value through Claude's capabilities:

Technical Context: Explain technologies, architectures, or approaches. Provide industry standard practices. Compare common solutions. Suggest evaluation criteria.

Business Context: Industry trends affecting topic. Competitive landscape insights. Common challenges in space. ROI considerations.

Decision Support: Decision-making frameworks (e.g., RICE, cost-benefit). Risk assessment patterns. Trade-off analysis approaches. Success criteria suggestions.

Customer Context (for external meetings): Industry-specific challenges. Common pain points. Best practices from similar companies. Value proposition framing.

Process Guidance: Meeting facilitation techniques. Discussion frameworks. Retrospective patterns. Brainstorming structures.

Note: Use general knowledge and analytical capabilities. Don't fabricate specific facts. Clearly distinguish Notion facts from Claude insights.

Meeting Context Sources

Project Pages: Status, goals, team, timelines (most important) Previous Meeting Notes: Historical discussions, action items, decisions (recurring meetings) Task/Issue Database: Current status, blockers, completed/upcoming work (project meetings) Specifications/Designs: Requirements, decisions, approach, open questions (technical meetings) Reports/Dashboards: Metrics, KPIs, performance data, trends (executive meetings)

Linking Meetings to Projects

Forward Link: Add meeting to project page's "Meetings" section Backward Link: Include "Related Project" section in agenda with project mention Maintain bidirectional links for easy navigation

Meeting Series Management

Recurring Meetings: Create series parent page with schedule, meeting notes list, standing agenda, and action items tracker. Link individual meetings to parent.

Meeting Database: For organizations, use database with properties: Meeting Title, Date, Type (Decision/Status/Brainstorm), Project, Attendees, Status (Scheduled/Completed)

Post-Meeting Actions

Update agenda with:

Decisions: List each decision with rationale and owner Action Items: Checkbox list with owner and due date (consider creating tasks in database) Key Outcomes: Bullet list of main outcomes

Meeting Prep Timing

Day-Before (next-day meetings): Gather context → create agenda → share with attendees → allow review time Hour-Before (last-minute): Quick context → brief pre-read → basic agenda → essentials only Week-Before (major meetings): Comprehensive research → detailed pre-read → structured agenda → pre-meeting reviews

Best Practices

  1. Create both documents: Internal pre-read + external agenda for important meetings
  2. Distinguish sources: Label what's from Notion vs. Claude research
  3. Start with search: Cast wide net in Notion, then narrow
  4. Keep pre-read concise: 2-3 pages maximum, even with research
  5. Professional external docs: Agenda should be polished and focused
  6. Enrich thoughtfully: Claude research should add real value, not fluff
  7. Link documents: Pre-read mentions agenda, agenda mentions pre-read
  8. Include metrics: Data from Notion helps ground discussions
  9. Share appropriately: Pre-read to internal team, agenda to all participants
  10. Share early: Give attendees time to review (24hr+ for important meetings)
  11. Update post-meeting: Capture decisions and actions in agenda

Advanced Features

Meeting templates: See reference/template-selection-guide.md for comprehensive template library

Common Issues

"Too much context": Split into pre-read (internal, comprehensive) and agenda (external, focused) "Can't find relevant pages": Broaden search, try different terms, ask user for page URLs "Meeting purpose unclear": Ask user to clarify before proceeding "No recent updates": Note that in pre-read, focus on historical context and strategic considerations "External meeting - no internal context": Create simpler structure with just agenda, skip internal pre-read or keep it minimal "Claude research too generic": Focus on specific insights relevant to the actual meeting topic, not general platitudes

Examples

See examples/ for complete workflows: