While you focus on high-value work, Pulse runs continuously in the background, anticipating needs, preparing materials, and keeping your operations moving smoothly. These background tasks are what transform Pulse from a reactive assistant into a true Personal COO.
Daily Briefings
Start each day with a comprehensive, personalized briefing that prepares you for what's ahead.
How Daily Briefings Work
Every morning (at your preferred time), Pulse assembles a briefing that synthesizes information from all your connected tools. This isn't a simple list of calendar events and unread emails—it's an intelligent digest that highlights what requires your attention and why.
The briefing includes your schedule for the day with context about each meeting, priority emails that need responses, tasks approaching their deadlines, any scheduling conflicts or issues that need resolution, and updates on projects you're tracking. Pulse also surfaces opportunities you might otherwise miss, like a contact you've been meaning to reach out to or a deadline you should get ahead of.
What's Included
Schedule Overview
Your complete day's schedule with prep notes for each meeting. Pulse pulls relevant context from past notes, emails, and conversations so you walk into each meeting prepared. If meetings require specific preparation, Pulse flags what you need to review or create beforehand.
Priority Communications
The most important emails from yesterday and overnight, categorized by urgency and type. Pulse distinguishes between messages that need immediate responses, those requiring decisions, and informational updates you should be aware of. For high-priority items, Pulse often includes draft responses ready for your review.
Task Priorities
Your most important to-dos for the day, organized by deadline and project. Pulse highlights tasks that are blocking others or approaching deadlines. If your schedule looks too packed to complete everything, Pulse flags the conflict and suggests what might need to be rescheduled or delegated.
Conflicts and Issues
Any scheduling conflicts, missing information for upcoming meetings, or dependencies that might cause problems. Pulse proactively identifies these issues so you can address them early rather than discovering them in the moment.
Opportunities
Proactive suggestions based on your goals and past behavior. This might include a reminder to follow up with someone you haven't talked to in a while, a heads-up about an approaching deadline for a strategic initiative, or a suggestion to block focus time before your week gets too fragmented.
Customization
Tailor your daily briefing to match your preferences. Choose what time it arrives (most people prefer early morning before they start work). Select which categories to include or emphasize. Set VIP contacts whose messages always appear in your briefing. Define what counts as "high priority" based on your role and responsibilities.
Benefits
Never start your day wondering what needs attention. Walk into meetings prepared with relevant context. Catch potential issues before they become urgent. Make better prioritization decisions with complete information. Reduce morning anxiety by having a clear plan before you open your inbox.
Email Triage
Pulse continuously monitors your inbox, automatically prioritizing messages so you focus on what matters most.
How Email Triage Works
As emails arrive throughout the day, Pulse analyzes each one for urgency, importance, and required action. The system considers who sent it, what it's about, whether it mentions deadlines or commitments, and how it relates to your current priorities and projects.
Emails are categorized into levels: urgent action required, response needed, informational (important to read), and low priority or noise. Pulse surfaces the first two categories and quietly handles the rest, archiving obvious spam and newsletters unless you've indicated you want to see them.
For urgent emails, Pulse can send you immediate notifications. For those requiring responses, Pulse often drafts replies based on the context and your past communication patterns, queuing them for your review. Informational emails are summarized so you can quickly scan what's happening without reading everything in detail.
Smart Categorization
VIP Detection
Messages from your designated VIP contacts are always prioritized. Pulse also learns who matters in your work—frequent correspondents, people you respond to quickly, and stakeholders on important projects—and gives their emails higher priority.
Deadline Recognition
Pulse identifies time-sensitive requests, even when not explicitly stated. Phrases like "by end of week," "before the meeting," or "when you get a chance" are interpreted in context to determine true urgency.
Thread Understanding
Pulse follows email threads, understanding which conversations require your input versus which are just FYIs. It knows when you've been directly asked a question versus copied for awareness, and prioritizes accordingly.
Project Context
Emails related to your active projects get appropriate priority based on project status. Messages about projects with approaching deadlines get elevated, while those for future initiatives can wait.
Automated Actions
Beyond prioritization, Pulse can take actions on routine emails. It can auto-archive newsletters you rarely read, unsubscribe you from unwanted marketing emails, file messages into appropriate folders, and mark emails as read that don't require action from you. These automated actions keep your inbox clean without requiring constant attention.
Benefits
Spend less time sorting email and more time responding to what matters. Never miss important messages from key stakeholders. Reduce inbox anxiety by knowing Pulse is watching for urgent items. Maintain better response times on critical communications. Keep your inbox organized without manual effort.
Proactive Drafts
Pulse doesn't wait for you to start writing—it prepares draft responses when the context suggests they'd be helpful.
How Proactive Drafts Work
When Pulse identifies an email that requires a response, it evaluates whether it can draft a useful reply based on available context. For routine requests like meeting confirmations, status updates, or simple questions, Pulse generates draft responses automatically and queues them for your review.
These drafts aren't meant to replace your judgment—they're meant to give you a head start. Pulse handles the structure, includes relevant details, and maintains appropriate tone. You review, edit as needed, and send. What would have taken 5 minutes now takes 30 seconds.
When Pulse Drafts Proactively
Meeting Requests
When someone asks for a meeting, Pulse checks your calendar, identifies available times, and drafts a response suggesting specific time slots. If you've already met with this person, Pulse references your last meeting to maintain continuity.
Status Updates
When asked for project status, Pulse pulls from your recent notes, to-dos completed, and calendar activity to draft an update. It structures the information clearly and highlights key progress or blockers.
Simple Questions
For factual questions that Pulse can answer from your notes, previous emails, or shared documents, it drafts responses with the relevant information and sources.
Follow-ups
When you haven't heard back on an important request after a reasonable time, Pulse drafts a polite follow-up reminder for your review.
Routine Acknowledgments
For emails that primarily need acknowledgment—"Got it, thanks" or "Received, will review"—Pulse drafts appropriate responses that maintain professionalism while saving you typing time.
Draft Quality
Pulse learns your communication style over time, adapting to your preferred level of formality, common phrases, and email structure. It varies tone based on who you're writing to, matching the formality level of the relationship and conversation context.
All drafts are clearly marked as AI-generated and queued for your review. You can edit them freely, use them as-is, or discard them. Over time, as you approve drafts with minimal edits, Pulse learns what works for you and improves its future suggestions.
Benefits
Respond faster to routine communications without sacrificing quality. Reduce the mental burden of composing messages from scratch. Maintain consistent communication even when you're busy. Never let simple emails languish in your inbox because you didn't have time to compose a response. Focus your writing energy on complex, strategic communications that truly require your unique input.
Wake-Up Calls
Get optional early notifications for key days when extra preparation or early start would be valuable.
How Wake-Up Calls Work
Pulse monitors your schedule and commitments, identifying days that warrant special attention. These might be days with important presentations, early morning flights, critical deadlines, or unusually packed schedules.
For these key days, Pulse can send you an earlier notification than your standard daily briefing—a wake-up call that gives you extra time to prepare. This notification includes why the day is important, what requires your attention, and any last-minute preparations you should handle.
When Pulse Sends Wake-Up Calls
Travel Days
When you have early flights or need to leave unusually early for travel, Pulse sends a reminder with your departure time, travel duration accounting for current traffic, and a checklist of pre-travel tasks (like packing, printing boarding passes, or arranging car service).
Big Presentations
Before important presentations, client meetings, or other high-stakes events, Pulse sends a wake-up call with extra time to review materials, practice, or handle any last-minute preparation.
Deadline Days
When major deliverables are due, Pulse alerts you early to ensure you have adequate time to finalize work and handle any unexpected issues that might arise.
Packed Schedules
On days when your calendar is unusually full, Pulse sends an early heads-up so you can mentally prepare for the intensity and maybe frontload important work.
Customization
Configure which situations trigger wake-up calls and how early you want to be notified. Some people prefer wake-up calls 2 hours before their first commitment; others want them the night before. Set your preferences for different types of important days.
You can also set quiet hours when wake-up calls should never interrupt, even for important days. Pulse respects your need for rest and work-life boundaries.
Benefits
Never oversleep on important days. Have adequate preparation time for high-stakes situations. Reduce morning stress by starting early when it matters. Feel confident and prepared for challenging days. Maintain healthy sleep patterns by getting to bed earlier when you know a wake-up call is coming.
How Background Tasks Work Together
The power of these background tasks comes from how they complement each other:
Daily briefings use insights from email triage to highlight what needs attention. Proactive drafts are queued and referenced in your briefing so you can quickly approve and send them. Wake-up calls ensure you see your briefing with enough time to act on it for important days. Email triage feeds information into all the other tasks, providing the intelligence that makes briefings useful and drafts accurate.
This orchestration means Pulse is always working one step ahead of you, preparing what you'll need before you need it. You're not managing tasks—you're reviewing and approving Pulse's work, which is a fundamentally different and more efficient way to operate.
Configuration and Control
All background tasks can be configured from your Pulse settings. You control what runs, when it runs, and how much automation you want. Start conservative with everything requiring your review, then gradually increase automation as you build trust in Pulse's decision-making.
You can pause background tasks entirely if needed, like during vacation when you don't want to think about work. Pulse respects your boundaries and adapts to your working patterns, including learning when you're typically offline and not sending notifications during those hours.
The goal is to have Pulse work for you in a way that feels helpful, not intrusive—anticipating your needs without overwhelming you with notifications or taking actions you're not comfortable with.