18.12.2025
17 min
Zoom vs Google Meet vs Teams: Which One is Best for You? [2026]
By Sanduni
Growth Content Editor

When I first decided to check out Zoom vs Google Meet vs Microsoft Teams, I thought I’d just do a quick look at each video conferencing platform side by side. But honestly, I spent HOURS testing them all by myself.
I’m not kidding,
- I actually set up real meetings,
- Clicked on every button I could find,
- Looked at all the price options, and,
- Even read what real people said about them (some are good, some…not so much!)
I’m not going to exaggerate or make things sound better than they are. I just want you to know what could be the best video conferencing app for your specific situation.
And don’t forget, with every meeting tool, there’s always the best AI meeting note taker, like Jamie (that’s us!) So, once you find the best video conferencing app for you, download Jamie to get those meeting notes automatically!
Now, let’s find out which meeting platform is the best for you!
Capture your first meeting
Jamie transcribes your computer's audio directly, with no meeting bots joining your call. Available for MacOS and Windows.
TL;DR: Zoom vs Google Meet vs Teams
- The best video conferencing platform depends on user needs:
- Zoom excels in easy teamwork and AI features like meeting notes and live translations;
- Google Meet is ideal for low bandwidth, quick, no-install meetings, and mobile use with features like breakout rooms and On-the-Go mode;
- Microsoft Teams is best for organizations fully integrated into the Microsoft 365 ecosystem, offering a unified workspace, task automation with bots, and advanced enterprise security.
- Pricing varies, with all three offering free tiers and paid plans starting from $4/user/month (Teams), $6.30/user/month (Google Meet), and $15.99/user/month (Zoom).
Feature Comparison: Zoom vs Google Meet vs Microsoft Teams
TL;DR:
- Zoom: Great for AI meeting summaries, live captions, and in-meeting collaboration (whiteboards)
- Google Meet: Quick no-install meetings with breakout rooms, on-the-go mode and emoji reactions.
- Microsoft Teams: Microsoft 365 integration, task automation with bots, and advanced presenter tools.
Zoom Features
AI-Powered Meeting Summaries

Source: Zoom
With Zoom Meetings' AI-powered meeting summaries, you don’t have to take notes or try to remember every little thing from a meeting. The AI Companion listens to the conversation and automatically generates a summary of what was discussed, including key points and action items.
I love that I can check the summary after the meeting is over. Instead of watching the whole recording, you can quickly look at the key points and see what you need to do next.
But you can't have this feature if you are a basic Zoom user.
Yes, Zoom AI Companion is not available in free plans, it's only available as an add-on in paid plans.
💜 Jamie can transcribe for you for free, and many users love our human-like meeting notes!
Easy Teamwork with Built-In Tools

Source: Zoom
During a meeting, you can work with your teams.
You can,
- Share and edit documents,
- Write on a whiteboard,
- Take notes, all in the same app.
You don’t have to switch between different programs.
Zoom also works with other apps like Google Workspace, Microsoft Teams and Slack. You can schedule and start Zoom meetings right from those apps so you don’t waste time jumping between them.
You can also attach notes or agendas to meeting invites so everyone knows what you’ll be talking about beforehand, ensuring seamless integration with your workflow.
Live Caption Translations for Everyone

Source: Zoom
If you are in a meeting with people who speak different languages, Zoom can automatically show captions in multiple languages.
These captions are also super accurate, even when people use tricky words or industry-specific terms. You can even go back and look at the translated captions after the meeting to review what those tricky words were.
This makes it easy to double-check what was said and stay on top of things even if someone else spoke in another language.
Zoom Is the Right Choice if You:
- You need a reliable and easy-to-use platform for virtual meetings and collaboration.
- You value integrations with calendar and productivity tools for scheduling and management.
- You need a cost-effective solution that supports multiple communication formats video, audio and text.
Zoom Isn’t for You if You:
- You deal with frequent updates that change the interface and make it hard to navigate.
- You need a lightweight app that doesn’t require high-speed internet or a lot of system resources.
- You prefer a stable UI instead of frequent design and feature changes.
Google Meet Features
Breakout Rooms: Organizing Smaller Discussions Within Meetings
Google Meet’s Breakout Rooms allow hosts to split participants into smaller groups for focused discussions. Hosts can assign participants manually or let Google Meet do it automatically.
Inside a breakout room, participants can;
- Talk,
- Chat, and,
- Collaborate just like in the main meeting.
Only hosts can create breakout rooms, and they must do it from a computer. However, participants can join from any device. The host can check in on any breakout room and automatically bring everyone back to the main meeting when the session ends.
On-the-Go Mode: Joining Meetings While in Motion

Source: Google Workspace Updates
On-the-Go mode is perfect for joining a meeting while;
- Walking,
- Driving, or
- Commuting.
When I turned it on, my video was disabled, and the interface changed to big, easy-tap buttons for;
- Mute,
- Raise your hand, or
- Adjust audio.
This made it easier to focus on the conversation.
I also liked that the On-the-Go mode uses less data and allows full participation. I couldn’t see the video but I could hear the conversation and contribute via voice or chat.
Google Meet even detects motion and will automatically enable this mode. If needed, I could switch back to the regular interface with a single tap.
Reactions: Engaging with the Meeting Without Interruptions

Source: Google Workspace Updates
Google Meet’s Reactions let you react to a meeting with emojis instead of interrupting the speaker. You could send;
- Thumbs up 👍
- Clapping 👏
- Laughing 😂
- Shocked 😲
- Thinking 🤔
- Crying 😢
- Thumbs down 👎 emojis!
Google emoji reactions show up in two ways:
- As a temporary badge on the sender’s tile and,
- As floating emojis that group together in a “reaction bubble”.
You can also customize skin tones for reactions. Hosts and admins can turn off reactions if needed so the meeting stays focused but allows for non-interrupting engagement.
Google Meet Is the Right Choice if You:
- You need a user-friendly video conferencing solution with a clean interface and minimal setup.
- You want a secure platform with encryption and performance, even on low bandwidth.
- You need a browser-based solution with no software installation.
Google Meet Isn’t for You if You:
- You rely on free recording, meeting recordings are only available in paid plans.
- You prefer a dedicated desktop app instead of a browser-based experience.
- You need collaboration tools like real-time document annotation or in-meeting polling.
Microsoft Teams Features
1. Scheduling Channel Messages

Source: Microsoft Teams
One of the features I love in Microsoft Teams is scheduling channel messages. This is super helpful when working with teams across different time zones.
Instead of sending a message and having it get lost during someone’s off hours, you can write it out and set it to post when the team will see it.
To do this, you simply just compose your message in a channel and then click the “Schedule message” icon in the action bar. From there, you can choose the exact date and time you want the message to be posted.
Once you confirm, MsTeams queues it up.
You also have the option to go back and edit or reschedule the message if plans change. This is one of the more advanced features that make Microsoft Teams stand out.
2. Using Bots for Task Automation

Source: Microsoft Teams
Another feature I use regularly is the ability to chat with bots in Teams. These bots are like lightweight assistants that help answer questions or handle routine tasks without having to leave the Teams app.
For example, you can use these bots to
- Set reminders,
- Manage to-do lists and,
- Even pull in updates from other connected apps.
Chatting with a bot usually starts by typing @ followed by the bot’s name in a chat, group or channel.
Each bot has its own list of supported commands, which you can see by just starting to type a message. What makes this feature useful is that you don’t need to install separate apps for every small task.
Many bots can be added directly through the “Apps” section in Teams, and I’ve noticed some bots can even respond proactively in conversations without being directly mentioned, though this depends on the permissions given when adding the bot.
💜 A Sidebar pops up right next to your screen after you just clicked CTRL + J. This Sidebar is Jamie's real-time AI assistant.
Now you can chat with it, retrieve past information, ask Sidebar to coach you how to talk better during the next meetings, and much more. No more opening or closing browser tabs to find the help that you need. It's literally right by your side (get it...because it's called a Sidebar?)
Capture your first meeting
Jamie transcribes your computer's audio directly, with no meeting bots joining your call. Available for MacOS and Windows.
3. Green Room for Organizers and Presenters

Source: Microsoft Teams
Green Room in Teams meetings and webinars is a private space where organizers and presenters can hang out before the event starts. This will allow you to;
- Test if your audio and video are working fine,
- Go over the agenda with other speakers,
- Or make last-minute changes to shared content without attendees seeing or hearing anything.
You can turn on the green room as part of the meeting setup.
I assign specific people as presenters and then turn on the green room under meeting settings. Once in there, we can chat, review content, admit people from the lobby and even add apps like Q&A tools.
It feels like a backstage area where everything can be rehearsed and prepared. After the meeting ends, the green room stays open so the team can debrief.
That’s been super useful for quick feedback sessions right after events. The only thing I’ve had to watch out for is that some advanced features, like changing layouts or recording, aren’t available until the main meeting starts.
Microsoft Teams Is the Right Choice if You:
- You need tight integration with Microsoft 365 apps like Outlook, SharePoint and OneDrive.
- You want a secure enterprise-grade platform with compliance features for large organizations.
- You prefer a unified workspace for chat, calls, video meetings and document co-editing.
Microsoft Teams Isn’t for You if You:
- You struggle with complex interfaces, dense UI, hidden features and confusing navigation.
- You need a lightweight, fast-performing tool, users report frequent lags, slow loading and high bandwidth consumption.
- You need simple notifications, but search and storage issues limit efficiency.
Pricing Comparison: Zoom vs Google Meet vs Teams
TL;DR
- Zoom: Free; paid starts at $15.99/user/month with AI and 100+ participants
- Google Meet: $6.30/user/month; higher tiers add AI, recording, and 1,000 participants
- Teams: $4/user/month; includes 365 apps and 300 participants. Free version available
Zoom Pricing
Basic (Free)
- Meeting duration: Up to 40 minutes
- Participants: Up to 100
- Storage: Local recording only
- Whiteboards: 3
- Team Chat, Mail & Calendar: Included with limited features
- AI Companion: Not included
- Price: Free
Pro (1–99 users)
- Price:
- $15.99/month/user (billed monthly)
- $133.32/year/user (billed annually)
- Meeting duration: Up to 30 hours
- Participants: Up to 100 (expandable with Large Meeting add-on)
- AI Companion: Included
- Cloud Storage: 5 GB per license
- Whiteboards: 3
- Clips Plus: Unlimited videos
- Docs: Unlimited
- Mail & Calendar: Included
- Essential Apps: Free for 1 year
- Live Chat Support: Included
Business (10+ users)
- Price:
- $21.99/month/user (billed monthly)
- $183.24/year/user (billed annually)
- Everything in Pro, plus:
- Participants: Up to 300 (expandable)
- Whiteboards: Unlimited
- Scheduler: Included
- SSO, managed domains, etc.
- Zoom Phone (Business Plus): Optional bundle
Add-Ons (Monthly Prices)
- Zoom Docs: $8.99
- Large Meeting (up to 1,000 participants): From $50
- Zoom Webinars: From $79
- Zoom Sessions: From $99
- Zoom Scheduler: $5.99 (Free trial available)
- Zoom Clips Plus: $6.99
- Cloud Storage: From $10
- Whiteboard Plus: From $7
- Translated Captions: $5
- Audio Conferencing: From $100
- Zoom Phone Power Pack: $25
- Conference Room Connector: $49
- Compliance Manager (Theta Lake): $6
Google Meet Pricing
Business Starter : $6.30/user/month
- 100 participant video meetings
- Up to 24 hours per meeting
- US or international dial-in phone numbers
- Secure video meetings
Business Standard : $12.60/user/month
Includes all Business Starter features, plus extensive features:
- 150 participant video meetings
- Meeting recording saved to Google Drive
- Studio Sound noise cancellation
- Adaptive Audio for clearer communication
Business Plus : $22/user/month
Includes all Business Standard features, plus:
- 500 participant video meetings
- Attendance tracking
Enterprise: Contact sales for pricing
Includes all Business Plus features, plus:
- 1000 participant video meetings
- In-domain live streaming
- Advanced security, compliance & management features
- AI-powered features in Meet (summarize, translate, take notes)
Microsoft Team Pricing
Business Plans
Microsoft Teams Essentials
- $4.00/user/month, paid yearly
- Up to 30-hour meetings with 300 participants
- 10 GB cloud storage per user
- Real-time file sharing, tasks, and polling
- Meeting recordings with transcripts & live captions (English)
- Standard security (encrypted meetings, chats, calls, files)
- Microsoft 365 Copilot available as add-on
Microsoft 365 Business Basic
- $6.00/user/month, paid yearly
- Includes everything in Teams Essentials, plus:
- 1 TB cloud storage per user
- Custom business email (you@yourbusiness.com)
- Web/mobile versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook
- User management for up to 300 employees
- 10+ apps (Bookings, Planner, Forms, etc.)
- Spam & malware filtering
- Phone & web support
- Copilot available as add-on
Microsoft 365 Business Standard
- $12.50/user/month, paid yearly
- Includes everything in Business Basic, plus:
- Desktop apps: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook
- Webinars with registration & reporting
- New: Microsoft Loop collaborative workspaces
- New: Clipchamp for video editing & design
- Copilot available as add-on
Microsoft 365 Business Premium
- $22.00/user/month, paid yearly
- Includes everything in Business Standard, plus:
- Advanced security
- Access and data control
- Cyberthreat protection
- Copilot available as add-on
Home Plans
Microsoft Teams (Free)
- $0/month
- Group calling: 60 mins, 100 participants
- Unlimited chat
- 5 GB cloud storage
- Tasks, polling, & basic security features
Microsoft 365 Personal
- $9.99/month or $99.99/year
- For 1 user
- Group calling: 30 hours, 300 participants
- 1 TB cloud storage
- Desktop apps: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, OneNote
- Copilot, design tools, grammar support
- Ad-free email & calendar
- Live captions (English)
- Ongoing tech support
Microsoft 365 Family
- $12.99/month or $129.99/year
- For up to 6 users
- All Personal plan features, but:
- 6 TB total cloud storage (1 TB per person)
- Shared access across family members
What Are Customers Saying About Zoom, Google Meet and Teams?
Zoom Reviews | G2 Rating: 4.5
What users love:
- "Zoom...was just amazing, I have attended any meetings and calls on the Zoom. It is easy to understand and quick support. There are bunch of other features that I admire"
- "The image/video quality is amazing, easy to connect and I also like that I can use it as my calendar to put in reminders, tasks etc."
- "What I like best about Zoom Workplace is its easy integration of video, chat, and collaboration tools, all in one platform. It makes communication effortless and keeps teams connected, whether they're in the office or working remotely."
- "That it enable seamless communication across teams, making it easy to work together effectively, regardless of where we are. It also made work from home more accessible"
- "Most everyone uses Zoom, so new leads and existing clients are likely to have no trouble at all joining a meeting using our link."
Common complaints:
- "Zoom has lately been CRASHING whenever I share my screen. This has happened during some really important meetings. 3-4 times last week alone. Not being able to share the screen is non-negotiable for the kinds of meetings we run, so we had to disrupt the entire meeting and move to another platform. Insane."
- "First is zoom lags a bit and suddenly it gets crashed and sometimes it gets freezed. To access some settings we need to go back from meeting and enable them and again join the meet."
"Without a paid plan, the 40-minute limit on group meetings is bit restrictive for longer discussions." - "Downside is having to switch on mic and camera every time I join a meeting."
"sometomes when you use it from the web, it takes time to connect or join the call as there are many steps to join the call/meeting"
Source: G2
Google Meet Reviews | G2 Rating: 4.6
What users love:
- "I use it in all my interviews, and I like it goes for my calendar"
- "It is quick and easy to operate and even I can use it :)"
- "Screen sharing and audio and video calls"
- "High number of permitted users, captions, recording features, very easy to use and set up, helpful support when needed."
- "I think one of the best things about Google Meet is its integration with other Google tools, like Gmail and Google Calendar. It makes scheduling and joining meetings really easy- Plus, the ability to host meetings with up to 100 participants and share screens or collaborate on Google Docs makes it super useful."
Common complaints:
- "I think its a litte bit confunsing sometimes"
- "Don't think this is a Google meet issue but more internet- the connections sometimes are spotty"
- "Should improve in users feedback mostly about complaints"
- "Although it's totally compatible with other Google products, some people prefer other apps."
"the lack of a "waiting room" feature, where participants can wait until the host lets them in, can be a bit of a downside, especially for larger or more formal meetings."
Source: G2
Microsoft Teams | G2 Rating: 4.4
What users love
- "I use it pretty much everyday, all day, to communicate and share work items with colleagues."
"Microsoft Teams is an exceptional collaboration tool... features like video conferencing, file sharing, and team channels." - "It is a All-in-One Collaboration Hub, an Effective Communication Tools..."
- "Well, from chats to audio call or video call or setting up all the meetings in outlook, I do the same using the MS Teams."
- "The quick way and connected to calendar and easy join a conference also presenting a document with allowing other to have a control on the their screen."
Common complaints
- "Every once in a while it struggles to connnect at login but after one or two tries, it log me in."
"Microsoft Teams can be overwhelming with its complex interface... The app sometimes suffers from performance issues, such as lag and connectivity problems, which can disrupt workflow." - "It sometimes has 'it's moments'... there's always an issue out of the blue that prevents you from joining a meeting or delays in transmitting texts."
- "Microsoft Teams has plenty of potential as a collaboration tool, but it falls short... Teams frequently logs users out without notification, forcing them to go through multi-factor authentication just to get back in."
- "It crashes constantly. The screen sharing makes it difficult to see your attendees when presenting."
Source: G2
Final Verdict: Which One Should You Choose?
After testing Zoom, Google Meet, and Microsoft Teams, the best choice really depends on your workflow, team size, and collaboration needs.
So here’s the quick guide:
Choose Zoom if You:
- You need a video conferencing tool you already know with great audio/video quality.
- You want AI summaries, live captions, and a set of collaboration tools like whiteboards and document sharing.
- You value strong third-party integrations with tools like Google Workspace, Slack and more.
Choose Google Meet if You:
- You prefer simple, fast, browser-based video conferencing platforms—no desktop apps or heavy software.
- You have a tight budget and need something that “just works” for smaller or mobile teams.
- You need lightweight features like breakout rooms, emoji reactions and low-bandwidth support.
Choose Microsoft Teams if You:
- You’re deep in the Microsoft 365 ecosystem (Outlook, Word, Excel, SharePoint).
- You need an all-in-one workspace for chat, file collaboration, meetings and automation tools like bots and scheduled messaging.
- You run a large organization with strict compliance, admin controls and enterprise security.
Add Jamie to Any Video Platform and Never Take Notes Again
No matter which meeting app you end up choosing- Zoom, Google Meet, or Microsoft Teams- you still need one thing:
Good meeting notes...
That’s where Jamie (that's us!) comes in!
Jamie is an AI meeting assistant that works with whatever platform you already use. Jamie, do not send bots to your meetings, preserving the privacy and genuine human connection within all your meetings.
Just click "Start Meeting" and let Jamie do the rest.
See how Jamie works first-hand!
All feature list at a glance:
- Transcribes meetings automatically without bots and generates:
- Meeting notes
- Action items
- A full transcript (text version of everything said)
- Identifies and remembers speakers in transcripts (figures out who said what)
- Organizes notes by topics and can include:
- Speaker quotes
- Tags (labels you can filter later)
- Allows editing of:
- Notes
- Action items
- Transcripts
- Includes formatting tools and find-and-replace
- Detects when you’re in a meeting using microphone activity and prompts you to start recording
- Available as a native app on:
- macOS (OSX 13.1+)
- Windows
- iOS
- Supports:
- In-person meetings
- Offline meetings
- Online meetings
- Works with online meeting platforms without using a virtual bot
- iOS app features:
- Records in-person meetings
- Syncs across iPhone and desktop
- Supports offline recording
- Additional iOS capabilities:
- Task support
- Speaker renaming
- Tags
- Copying notes and transcripts
- Calendar integration with:
- Google Calendar
- Outlook
- iOS shows synced meetings after a calendar is connected
- Workspaces for:
- Individuals
- Teams
- Includes invites and shared access for collaboration
- Task management and tagging system to track follow-ups across meetings
- “Scratch Pad” feature:
- Lets you write private thoughts during a meeting
- Saved together with that specific meeting
- Optional consent emails:
- Sent to calendar attendees 24 hours before a recorded meeting
- Multilingual support:
- 100+ languages
- Supports mixed-language meetings
- Transcription and notes default to the most dominant spoken language
- AI features:
- Translate meeting notes
- Chat with meeting notes
- Summarize recent meetings
- Brainstorm ideals
- Write emails
- Copy-paste compatibility with:
- Notion
- Linear
- Todoist
- Bear
- Typora
- Ulysses
- Formatting and task handling may differ by app
- Notion integration:
- Creates a Jamie notes database
- Supports automatic or manual syncing
- OneNote integration:
- Creates a “My Jamie Notes” notebook
- Adds one page per meeting
- Supports updates
- CRM and work tool integrations:
- HubSpot
- Attio
- Salesforce
- Asana
- Includes stated limitations
- Privacy and security features:
- GDPR positioning
- AES encryption in transit and at rest
- EU-based storage (Frankfurt)
- Audio is deleted after transcription
- Notes generation uses Anthropic or OpenAI APIs (per documentation)
Let’s take a closer look at Jamie’s key features that set it apart. ⤵️
Leave meetings with clear notes, decisions, and owners
If you leave a meeting with scattered notes, you lose time recreating what happened. A transcript (text of the conversation) can be long and hard to scan, so key decisions and next steps get missed when you hand off work to someone else.
Jamie records the audio of your meetings and produces meeting notes, action items, and a transcript, with speaker identification so lines map to people. It also structures notes by topics and can include quotes and tags so the output is easier to review and share. Jamie turns meeting audio into organized notes plus action items you can reuse right away.
Start recording at the right time without relying on memory
If you forget to start a note tool, the most important part of the conversation can disappear. That can feel stressful, especially when meetings move fast and you’re also trying to participate.
Jamie monitors your device’s microphone status to detect when you may be in a meeting, then prompts you to start recording. Because Jamie runs as a native app, it works across online meeting platforms (without a virtual bot) and also supporting offline or in-person meetings.
Know how your meeting data is handled
If you’re unsure where recordings go or who can access them, it’s hard to feel comfortable using an AI tool in real work. For many teams, the risk is not only privacy, it's also whether you can explain the setup to others.
When you start Jamie, the audio is uploaded to servers in Frankfurt, Germany, processed in a serverless GPU environment (Modal) with no data stored there, and then permanently deleted after transcript generation. The transcript is stored in Frankfurt for access, and meeting notes are generated via LLM APIs, and the data is not stored there and not used for training by those providers; Jamie also does account-specific training for speaker identification and custom words without cross-user sharing. Jamie ensures utmost privacy using encrypted EU-hosted processing where audio is deleted after transcription and transcripts stay available for you.
Ask questions of your meetings when details slip away
When you can’t find the one decision, number, or promise someone made, work slows down. “What did we agree on?” becomes a guessing game, and you may end up re-watching recordings or asking people to repeat themselves.
Jamie includes an Ask AI feature that can translate meeting notes when you request it, and you can also chat with your notes to pull information and prepare follow-ups. This is meant to help you get answers from meeting content without digging through every line.
Send notes and follow-ups into the tools your team already uses
Copying notes into five different places creates delays and missed tasks. Even when you have good meeting notes, handoffs break when the notes stay stuck in one app and the rest of your workflow lives elsewhere.
Jamie supports sharing and syncing meeting notes and transcripts into other tools including Notion and OneNote, plus HubSpot, Attio, Salesforce, and Asana for specific “send as a note” or “sync tasks” flows; Jamie also has copy-paste compatibility with tools like Linear and Todoist.
Try Jamie for free today!
Capture your first meeting
Jamie transcribes your computer's audio directly, with no meeting bots joining your call. Available for MacOS and Windows.
Read More
- Find out why Jamie is the top AI note-taker for Zoom.
- Learn how to transcribe Zoom meetings for free with Jamie.
- Need help to blur the background in Zoom? We have a simple guide for you.
- Want to change your name on Zoom? Check our easy guide!
- Unsure how to share your screen on Zoom? We have instructions for you.
- Learn how to record a Zoom call with our step-by-step guide.
- Curious about changing the Zoom background? We have a tutorial for that!
- Find out how to schedule a Zoom meeting with our guide.
- Get the best Zoom meeting summaries with Jamie.
- Wondering how much Zoom costs? Read our simple breakdown!
- Check out the 12 best Zoom tips and tricks you might not know.
- Read our full Zoom review to see our thoughts.
- We also looked at the Zoom AI Companion – find all the details here.
- Which is better: Otter AI, Zoom AI Companion, or Jamie? Find out now!
- Google Meet vs Zoom: Our easy analysis helps you decide.
- Learn how you can record Google Meet meetings.
- Find out the best AI note taker for Google Meet.
- Learn step by step how you can record Google Meet meetings.
- Learn how to transcribe Microsoft Teams meetings.
- Here's the best AI note taker for Microsoft Teams.
- Learn how to record a Microsoft Teams Meeting step by step.
Sanduni Yureka is a Growth Content Editor at Jamie, known for driving a 10x increase in website traffic for clients across Singapore, the U.S., and Germany. With an LLB Honors degree and a background in law, Sanduni transitioned from aspiring lawyer to digital marketing expert during the 2019 lockdown. She now specializes in crafting high-impact SEO strategies for AI-powered SaaS companies, particularly those using large language models (LLMs). When she’s not binge-watching true crime shows, Sanduni is obsessed with studying everything SEO.
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