Cogram vs Granola
Detailed side-by-side comparison to help you choose the right tool
Cogram
AI Meeting Assistant
AI meeting assistant built specifically for professional services firms—consulting, legal, and accounting—that automatically generates meeting summaries, action items, and follow-ups in real time. Cogram uses context-aware AI to understand industry-specific terminology and client relationships, then pushes structured outputs directly into CRMs and project management tools so nothing falls through the cracks between meetings and execution.
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CustomGranola
AI Meeting Assistant
AI-powered meeting notepad that combines real-time transcription with your own notes to produce rich, structured summaries. Unlike bot-based tools like Otter.ai or Fireflies that join calls as visible participants, Granola runs locally and listens via your device's audio—no meeting bot required. Add personal context, highlights, and action items alongside AI-generated notes for a hybrid approach that captures both what was said and what you thought.
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CustomFeature Comparison
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Cogram - Pros & Cons
Pros
- ✓Purpose-built for professional services workflows rather than general-purpose meeting recording, so outputs map directly to client deliverables
- ✓Native CRM sync with Salesforce and HubSpot keeps client records updated without manual data entry after every client call
- ✓Action items include assigned owners and due dates extracted from conversation context, reducing post-meeting admin work significantly
- ✓Handles industry-specific terminology in consulting, legal, and accounting better than general transcription tools that train on broader datasets
- ✓Structured summary format separates decisions, risks, and next steps for easy scanning—useful for partners who skip meetings but need the takeaways
- ✓Team-level analytics give managers visibility into follow-through rates and client engagement patterns, which most competitors lack entirely
Cons
- ✗Pricing targets mid-market and enterprise teams—the Team plan starts at $29/user/month, which adds up quickly for solo practitioners or firms under 5 people compared to tools like Otter.ai or Fireflies
- ✗Less suited for casual or internal brainstorming meetings where structured outputs and CRM sync add little value—you're paying for features you won't use
- âś—CRM integrations are strongest with Salesforce and HubSpot; firms using Pipedrive, Zoho, or industry-specific CRMs like Clio may need Zapier workarounds or API custom work
- âś—Relies on clear audio quality and speaker identification, which can degrade in large in-person meetings with shared microphones or poor room acoustics
- ✗Niche industry focus means the AI vocabulary models may not perform as well for firms outside consulting, legal, and accounting—tech startups or creative agencies would likely get more value from a general-purpose tool
Granola - Pros & Cons
Pros
- ✓Lightweight and non-intrusive—no bot joins your call, so participants aren't distracted or made uncomfortable
- ✓Works across all meeting platforms including Zoom, Google Meet, and Teams without per-platform setup
- ✓Combines your shorthand notes with the full transcript so AI output reflects both what was said and what you thought was important
- ✓Built-in AI chat lets you query your meeting transcript after the call—ask for action items, objections, budget details, or custom summaries
- ✓One-click sharing to Slack, email, CRM, ATS, and public links eliminates manual copy-paste workflows
- ✓iPhone app extends coverage to phone calls and meetings away from your desk
Cons
- âś—Free tier limited to 25 AI notes per month, which can run out within a week for people with heavy meeting loads
- âś—Requires microphone/system audio access, which some corporate IT policies and MDM configurations restrict
- ✗Fewer native integrations than mature competitors like Fireflies or Otter.ai—Ryan Hoover publicly noted wanting a marketplace of one-click integrations
- ✗No real-time collaborative editing—notes are authored individually and then shared after the meeting
- âś—Desktop-first experience; the iPhone app extends to phone calls but mobile functionality is secondary to the desktop notepad
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