Stop tab-switching. Start your day with one brief.
An enterprise morning dashboard that aggregates Teams, Outlook, ClickUp, VantagePoint, and more into a single prioritised view — so knowledge workers can start the day with a plan, not a notification backlog.
Product Designer, Software Developer
2025-01-01
Stop tab-switching. Start your day with one brief.
If you work in a modern company, your morning probably looks like this: open Teams, scan for mentions, switch to Outlook, check ClickUp for overdue tasks, remember you haven't logged your timesheet — and somehow it's already 10am.
This is not a you problem. It's a systems problem. Most companies run 6–12 digital platforms that employees are expected to monitor daily. None of them talk to each other. Collectively, they create a low-grade cognitive drain before the real work even starts.
Morning Brief is an attempt to fix that.
The idea: your tools deserve a standup too
In agile teams, the daily standup has one purpose: spend 15 minutes surfacing what matters, what's blocked, and what's happening today — so everyone can get on with actual work.
Morning Brief applies that same logic to your tools. Instead of you visiting each platform and asking "what do I need to know?", the app does it for you — every morning — and gives you one consolidated view. One page. One reading. Then you go do things.
What it pulls together
Morning Brief connects to the platforms most knowledge workers use daily:
- Microsoft Teams & Outlook — unread messages, mentions, flagged emails
- SharePoint — documents needing review or sign-off
- ClickUp — overdue tasks, blockers, items assigned to you
- VantagePoint — timesheet status, unlogged hours
- HiBob & iHCM — HR actions, payroll inputs due
- Kace — open support tickets assigned to you
- Internal apps — any internally built tools backed by your own data
Each morning it reads all of them, synthesises what's relevant to you specifically, and presents it as a structured brief — not a raw feed.
The interface is simple by design. A focus score at the top gives you a weather forecast for your workday. Below that: a smart alert that surfaces cross-platform connections ("Project X is behind in ClickUp, you have a standup about it in 45 minutes, and there's an open Kace ticket on the same issue"). Then your day's meetings with context chips, and 5–8 prioritised actions colour-coded by urgency — each tagged with its source platform.
For people just joining
Onboarding is where context-switching hurts most. New joiners don't know which platform to check for what, and are often overwhelmed before doing a single piece of real work.
Morning Brief handles this with a guided mode for the first two weeks. Each item comes with a plain-language explanation of what the platform is and why the action matters. The explainers gradually fade as the person gets comfortable, until by week three they're using the full brief like everyone else. They learn the tool landscape through daily use — no training session required.
What this is not
Morning Brief doesn't replace any existing tool, store your data, or act on your behalf. Every platform keeps doing what it does. The quality of the brief depends on the quality of data in each system — if ClickUp isn't up to date, the brief won't know what's actually overdue.
The real value isn't just the time saved. It's the shift from reactive to intentional. When you start the day with one coherent view, you're working from a plan — not responding to whatever notification arrived most recently.
Try it live
Morning Brief connects to enterprise platforms via their native APIs. Data is read-only and processed per session — nothing is stored outside your existing systems.
