Daily Briefing.
Every morning, the Operator that knows your business better than you do briefs you on it. It read everything overnight, remembers every detail, and tells you exactly what matters today. Before you open a single tab.
It already knows. You just read.
It sees everything at once
By the time you set (6:45am works well), your Operator has already read your calendar, your inbox, your tasks, and every tool it is connected to. It sees every account in one pass, never misses a thread, and never has an off day.
It knows what matters
Because it knows your business, it does not hand you a list. It ranks. It knows which client is fragile, which deadline is real, which meeting you keep underpreparing for. It surfaces the few things that move your day and drops the noise.
It briefs you
The briefing lands in your inbox or on your phone. Today's schedule, what needs your attention, what is at risk. Under 500 words. You read it in two minutes and walk in already on top of your own business. And it gets sharper at it every single week.
The morning briefing, every weekday.
Conflicts caught, prep you owe pulled, the account that needs you flagged. Your Operator read it all overnight. Nothing to click through, everything that matters in one scroll.
9:00 conflict — you’re double-booked between the Acme intro call and the standup with Marcus. Acme has the Zoom link, Marcus is in Slack huddle.
- 9:00 AM — Acme intro call · Zoom →
- 9:00 AM — Eng standup (conflict) · Slack huddle →
- 11:30 AM — Lunch · Mass Ave
- 2:00 PM — Sarah / BuildCorp · Google Meet →
Acme call: bring the pricing breakdown you drafted Tuesday. BuildCorp: Sarah asked for the Cincinnati case study — it’s in Drive at /customers/buildcorp-cincinnati.md.
It reads your whole stack.
Read-only. Pulls today's events, meeting titles, times, and attached notes.
Read-only. Scans unread messages, prioritizes by sender or label, surfaces what needs attention.
Optional. Reads a task list sheet for overdue or due-today items to include in the briefing.
Optional. Delivers the briefing as an SMS to your phone or posts it to a private Slack channel instead of email.
Just tell it what you want.
Every weekday at 6:45am, pull my Google Calendar events for today, any unread Gmail messages from the past 18 hours marked as important or from senders in my VIP list, and any rows in my "Tasks" Google Sheet where the due date is today or earlier and the status is not "done". Compile everything into a single briefing email with three labeled sections: Today's Schedule, Inbox Priorities, and Open Items. Keep the total under 450 words. Send it to my email.
Common questions.
What time does the briefing arrive?
Default 7:30am in your time zone. You can pick any time during the builder flow. Weekend skip is on by default.
Does it pull from anything besides calendar?
Yes. Your Operator reads everything it is connected to: calendar, inbox, tasks, docs, and your tools. It already knows your business, so the briefing is what matters today, not a raw data dump.
Is this overkill if I already use the Google Calendar daily email?
Different thing entirely. Google’s digest is a literal list with no idea what your business is. Your Operator knows your business, remembers every detail, and tells you what actually matters today: the conflict to fix, the prep you owe, the account that needs attention.
What plan?
Hapex Plus at $49/month covers the morning briefing comfortably. The same Operator runs the rest of your business, so most owners move up to Pro or Max as they hand it more. See pricing.
Can I get it on my phone instead of email?
Yes. Your Operator can route the briefing to SMS (via Linq or Twilio) or to a Slack DM. Many owners do both.
Still unsure if this fits? Read the docs or meet your Operator and tell it about your business. It costs nothing until you activate.
Walk in already on top of your business.
Meet the Operator that knows your business better than you do. Briefing you by tomorrow morning.