After the meeting
Find the recording, transcript, and AI insights from your Quantum Meetings call — and know exactly when recording applies to you.
What gets created
When a host enables recording for a meeting, three things can come out of it:
- The recording — the full video of the call, available to download or share once processing finishes.
- The transcript — a written record of what was said, which makes the meeting searchable and reviewable without re-watching.
- AI insights — analysis generated from the meeting, surfacing key moments and takeaways so you can review a one-hour interview in minutes.
Where to find them
Open the meeting from your meetings list after it ends. Recordings, transcripts, and insights attach to the meeting itself, so everything from one interview lives in one place. From a saved recording you can Download Recording, Share Recording, or Create Clip to cut a shareable segment instead of sending the whole call.
Processing takes a moment
Recordings and transcripts appear after processing, not instantly when the call ends. If a fresh meeting shows nothing yet, give it a little time and reload.
Recording consent, in plain language
Recording is a host decision — and you always know when it applies to you, before you participate.
In practice:
- When the host has enabled recording, you see a Recording Consent Required notice before you participate, telling you the meeting will be recorded.
- Recording exists for quality and review purposes — typically so interviewers and candidates can revisit what was actually said.
- If you are not comfortable being recorded, say so before the meeting starts. Declining consent is always your right; raise it with the host or your Talent Strategist so the meeting can proceed in a way that works for everyone.
For how your data is handled more broadly, see Privacy and your data.
How to use the outputs
- After an interview, read the AI insights the same day. They show where the conversation went well and where you hedged — direct input for your next Interview Prep session.
- Use the transcript to capture exact phrasing — the role's priorities as the interviewer described them are gold for follow-ups and offer conversations.
- Use clips when one segment matters: a question you want your strategist's read on travels better as a two-minute clip than a link to a full recording.

