Without Fluso
You search your email for the company’s name. Find two threads. You search Slack. Find a discussion from January. You try to remember what you concluded. Your colleagues are still waiting. You give a vague answer: “I think we looked at them… they were interesting but I don’t remember the specifics.” Everyone nods politely. The conversation moves on. You make a note to look it up properly later, and don’t.With Fluso
You discreetly type, while someone else is talking:“What do I know about Company X?”Fluso replies: “You researched Company X on January 15. They’re a Series B fintech startup, $30M raised from a16z. Their product competes with Stripe in the APAC market. In your January Slack discussion with the team, the conclusion was: interesting tech but not a fit for partnership due to competitive overlap. You haven’t interacted with them since.” You answer when it’s your turn: “Ah yes, Company X — we evaluated them in January. Solid tech, but some competitive overlap made a partnership complex. They’re worth watching in APAC though.” You sound informed and prepared, because you are. The thing you would have forgotten is in front of you.
The recall queries that pay off
| Type | What you ask |
|---|---|
| Person history | ”What’s the history of our relationship with Acme Corp?” |
| Decision recovery | ”What did we decide about the Q3 budget in the April planning meeting?” |
| Topic across time | ”What have we discussed about AI regulation?” |
| Project status | ”Where does the Acme deal stand right now?” |
| Who knows what | ”Who on the team has worked on the authentication system?” |
| Connection finder | ”Is there any link between the Acme deal and the Stripe conversation?” |
| Last contact | ”When did I last talk to the Stripe team?” |
| Relationship health | ”How’s the Acme relationship going? Any red flags?” |
How recall scales over time
The graph builds. The longer you’ve been using Fluso, the deeper the recall. In week one, it can recall your frequent contacts and current projects. By the end of month one, key relationships have history, project status is real-time, your communication patterns are visible. At three months, Fluso starts surfacing patterns you wouldn’t think to ask about: relationships you’ve gone quiet on, projects that are stalled, topics that keep coming up without resolution. After six months, it’s institutional memory. “What was the outcome of that vendor negotiation in January?” gets a real answer, with citations.When recall is most valuable
Mid-meeting, while someone else is talking. The discreet query that saves your reputation. Pre-call. “Brief me on Sarah from Acme.” Two minutes of context before you join the Zoom. Weekly review. “What slipped this week?” or “What’s stalled?” — patterns surface that you wouldn’t notice scrolling through email. Quarterly planning. “What were our Q1 commitments and which did we hit?” Real institutional memory, not someone’s reconstructed PowerPoint.Setup
Gmail connected (see Gmail). Calendar connected so meeting prep enriches the graph. Slack if your team uses it. Process meeting transcripts as a habit — that’s where decisions enter the graph.Privacy
The graph is yours alone. Lives in your isolated workspace. Never shared with other users. Never used to train models. Delete individual entries or wipe the whole thing whenever you want. Full picture at Security & privacy.Related
Memory feature
The full deep dive on the knowledge graph.
Meetings workflow
Meeting prep is recall in action — see it in context.