Granola, the AI-powered meeting note app, recently introduced a feature called “Recipes” that allows users to save and reuse prompt shortcuts during or after meetings. Users can trigger a recipe by typing “/” in the chat and selecting a saved prompt, helping streamline repetitive analysis tasks like summarizing, extracting action items, or asking targeted questions. The feature supports both meeting-specific and cross-meeting contexts, and Granola plans to expand capabilities by integrating external services to feed more data into Recipes. In announcing the feature, the cofounder noted that many users previously copied transcripts into ChatGPT or Claude for deeper analysis; Recipes aims to shift that workflow inside Granola’s ecosystem. This update positions Granola more directly in competition with productivity tools offering prompt automation and reusable workflows. (Sources: TechCrunch, Tech Buzz, Stackfix)
Key Takeaways
– Recipes lets users save and invoke prompt templates (via “/”) to streamline repetitive AI tasks within Granola.
– The update aims to reduce reliance on external models like ChatGPT by retaining context and execution inside Granola.
– Granola sees this as a strategic move to deepen its offering amid growing competition in AI meeting tools.
In-Depth
Granola has steadily carved out a niche among AI meeting assistants by focusing on simplicity, speed, and in-context intelligence. Until now, it mostly functioned by quietly capturing audio from your device (rather than inserting a bot into calls), transcribing conversations, and stitching together summaries, action items, and highlights. With the launch of Recipes, the app now gives users a way to embed reusable prompt logic directly into those workflows.
Recipes essentially act like macros or shortcuts for AI prompts. Suppose after every meeting you routinely ask, “Give me three follow-ups” or “Summarize objections raised by X.” You can now create those as Recipes, name them, and trigger them by typing “/RecipeName” in Granola’s chat interface. You can scope them to a single meeting or allow them to persist across multiple meetings. Granola already offers a library of prebuilt recipes organized by before, during, and after meeting phases. The goal: fewer manual steps, more consistency, and more of the AI reasoning staying inside Granola instead of being offloaded to ChatGPT or Claude.
That shift is intentional. In announcing Recipes, Granola’s cofounder pointed out that many users export transcripts to external models to “ask questions,” so this feature tries to internalize that second step. That helps Granola retain control over context (speaker metadata, prior discussion, templates) and reduces friction from context switching. It’s also a defensive play: reducing the likelihood that users drift away to adjacent AI tools for deeper analysis.
Of course, success depends on how well Recipes integrates into existing workflows. A prompt system only works if it’s flexible yet intuitive—not a burden to maintain, and useful in edge cases. Granola already has some momentum: reviewers praise its fast processing, clean UI, and ability to transcribe without a meeting bot. On the flip side, users have noted limitations such as imperfect speaker attribution, occasional trigger failures, and the absence of audio playback or deeper cross-meeting analytics.
With Recipes, Granola enters the domain of AI productivity tooling that combines note capture and prompt automation — competing with tools that let you create “skills,” “macros,” or custom GPTs. If done well, Recipes could deepen user retention (you start investing in custom prompt logic), raise switching costs, and make Granola more than just a meeting notetaker. But if it’s tacked on or confusing, it risk being seen as a gimmick.
In short: Recipes is a clever next move that doubles down on Granola’s identity — turning meetings into living data that you can more flexibly query and reuse over time — without leaving the app. Whether it redefines workflows or merely augments them will depend on adoption, usability, and how Granola builds linkage into external systems to expand context beyond a single meeting.

