How Chiefs Of Staff Use AI Browsers for Meeting Prep

How chiefs of staff run meeting prep in Strawberry using their existing tools and the browser. Prompt, real output, and tradeoffs.

How chiefs of staff use Strawberry for meeting prep

This guide is for chiefs of staff who run meeting prep. It explains how an AI browser like Strawberry runs the workflow given the tools a chief of staff actually uses every day, what the output should look like, and where the workflow fits in the chief of staff's week.

Why this matters for chiefs of staff

A chief of staff spends time on this: shadow the CEO across every meeting, surface what is being lost in the noise, and turn decisions into shipped work. The pain that makes meeting prep feel slow is real: context lives in every channel at once; the chief of staff is the only one with cross-functional visibility but no time. The reason an AI browser helps is that chiefs of staff already use multiple surfaces (Notion, Gmail, Slack, Google Workspace, the company CRM and analytics tools) to do this work, and the browser is the only tool that can read across all of them and produce a finished output.

What success looks like

The goal of meeting prep is to produce a one-page brief for each upcoming meeting so the person walks in informed and time isn't wasted. For a chief of staff, success metric is concrete: subjective - the meeting feels productive; objective - notes/next-step ratio is high. A finished meeting prep run should look like this: an exec brief, a meeting recap with owners, or a synthesised view of cross-functional state.

Signals meeting prep needs

The workflow needs these signals: attendee LinkedIn snapshots (role, tenure, mutuals); company recent news (funding, hires, product); last touchpoint in the CRM; any open opportunities or support cases. For a chief of staff the practical question is which signals come from the tools already in the stack (Notion, Gmail, Slack, Google Workspace, the company CRM and analytics tools) versus what the browser has to fetch. Strawberry reads the in-stack tools through native integrations and uses the browser for the rest (LinkedIn, news, company websites, search). The chief of staff stays in one surface.

Paste-ready Strawberry prompt

I'm a chief of staff. Run meeting prep for me using Notion, Gmail, Slack and the browser, then save the draft.

What a finished meeting prep output looks like

Concrete example, not a placeholder:

  • Meeting: 14:00 Thursday with Anna Lindqvist (VP Marketing, Voi) and Erik Nilsson (Head of Growth)
  • Last touch: warm intro from Marcus on May 14, no reply since
  • Company news: Germany pullout announced May 28; hired 4 paid acquisition managers in Q1
  • Suggested agenda: 1) Their take on Germany decision, 2) Where retention sits in 2026 priorities, 3) Show 90-sec demo of win-back loop
  • Three questions: How is the team structured post-pullout? What's the budget cycle? Who owns retention KPIs?

When this works, and when it does not

This workflow is right for chiefs of staff when the work is repeatable and crosses multiple tools. It is wrong when anything that requires the CoS to become the bottleneck on a function that should own itself. In that case, the chief of staff should keep doing the work manually until the pattern is clear enough to automate.

Three mistakes to avoid

  • Generic bios instead of role-specific context
  • Missing the most recent news that the prospect would expect you to know
  • No link back to the prior conversation thread

Caveats

Strawberry holds back on sending email, updating CRM records, or changing shared systems until a human approves the action. Treat the agent as a fast first-draft author, not an autopilot.

How chiefs of staff run meeting prep with Strawberry

1 Inputs

Tools

Chiefs Of Staff typical stack: Notion, Gmail, Slack.

2 Augment

Browser

Public web, LinkedIn, news, search fill the gaps the stack does not store.

3 Draft

Compose

Synthesise into the meeting prep shape that a chief of staff can ship.

4 Review

Human

Approve before any external action; save to system of record.

FAQ

Is this useful for a chief of staff who already has a workflow?

Yes - the question is which part of the workflow is the bottleneck. If it is research, data transfer, or writing the first draft, that is where Strawberry helps. The chief of staff keeps the judgement calls and final approvals.

What tools does the chief of staff need to connect?

The most common stack for chiefs of staff: Notion, Gmail, Slack, Google Workspace, the company CRM and analytics tools. The browser handles everything else (LinkedIn, news, search) without extra setup.

What is the biggest mistake to avoid?

Generic bios instead of role-specific context.