
Fireflies.ai, a company specialized in AI-powered meeting analysis, has announced the release of a new suite of mini-apps designed to accelerate information extraction from meeting transcripts.
The company has developed a smart voice assistant that records meetings and converts them into analyzable transcripts.
This latest move by Firefliesābacked by Khosla Venturesāaims to boost productivity by cutting down the time needed to generate summaries and actionable insights after meetings, all without requiring manual commands.
Founded in California in 2016, the company has since become a profitable player in this space. Its user base has grown eightfold, and its platform now serves over 10 million users worldwide.
In addition, Fireflies offers a free plan that includes features like automatic recording, transcription, and limited AI-generated summaries, with support for more than 60 languages.

To attract more users and further enhance its services, Fireflies has introduced over 200 mini-apps tailored to roles like sales, marketing, recruitment, technical support, and team management.
For instance, one app helps analyze sales opportunities by tracking budgets and timelines. Another evaluates customer service reps by providing coaching feedback. There are also apps to assist in shaping go-to-market strategies.
Previously, tools like Circleback required users to write manual commands to analyze meeting content.
Now, Fireflies enables users to automate these tasks, making the process smoother and saving teams a significant amount of time.
Moreover, the results from these apps can be automatically pushed to third-party platforms such as Salesforce, HubSpot, Jira, and Slack, enabling real-time sharing of reports and summaries.
The platform also allows for app customization, with future updates expected to include internal app-sharing features for teams.
In another move to enhance meeting preparation and participation, Fireflies is developing an intelligent briefing tool that introduces users to participant names and backgrounds.
Additionally, the company is experimenting with ādigital clonesā of users that can join meetings to answer preliminary questionsāa feature that resembles capabilities seen in competing tools like Zoom.