A daily business briefing you can listen to on the commute

The average business professional receives 120 emails per day and reads 40%. Your market intelligence shouldn't live in the 60% that doesn't get opened.

Start your free trial

Senior business professionals face an information problem that gets worse as they advance in their careers, not better. The higher you are in an organization, the more meetings fill your calendar — and the less time exists for the market intelligence that meetings don't provide. McKinsey research has found that Fortune 500 executives spend 72% of their working time in meetings. What's left is consumed by email.

The result is a systematic gap between what professionals need to know and what they actually absorb. Most business intelligence doesn't arrive in meetings — it arrives in trade publications, competitor blogs, regulatory filings, analyst reports, and industry newsletters. These are the sources that tell you what's happening before it shows up in your company's quarterly review. And they go unread.

The average business professional receives 120 emails per day and reads approximately 40% of them. Newsletters, even good ones from trusted sources, compete in that 60% that doesn't get opened. Not because the content isn't valuable — because there's no time slot where sitting down to read fits in a meeting-heavy day.

The time math: Fortune 500 executives spend 72% of their time in meetings. McKinsey research indicates that well-informed C-suite leaders make measurably better decisions — but the information has to reach them first. A 10-minute MP3 that plays during a commute or a walk costs nothing in calendar time and covers the same ground as 45 minutes of careful reading.

What belongs in a business briefing

A well-configured daily business briefing is built from four categories of sources:

Most RSS feeds publish 3-5 items per day. A curated set of 8-10 business sources produces enough material for a substantive daily briefing without redundancy. The AI's job is to identify what's actually significant — not to recap everything that appeared.

Sample briefing:
AI Investor Briefing →
A sample business briefing covering AI market developments, funding rounds, and strategic moves from selected investor and industry sources.

The commute as a strategic intelligence window

A commute is a fixed window that exists regardless of how busy you are. You're going to be in the car, on the train, or walking for however many minutes your commute takes. That time is currently producing either zero information intake (if you're listening to music) or random entertainment (if you're listening to a general news radio station).

A ListenBrief daily business briefing converts that window into targeted intelligence time. The MP3 plays on your phone, through your car's Bluetooth, or on earbuds. It ends when it ends — there's no inbox that grows, no feed that extends, no decision about what to read next. One episode, covering your defined sources, and you're done for the day.

Most ListenBrief business users choose the Pro plan (10 minutes). That's long enough to cover 8-12 sources meaningfully and short enough to finish during a typical commute. Power plan users (30 minutes) tend to have larger source lists — 20+ publications — or use the briefing during a gym session or longer commute.

Briefings are saved in your dashboard for 30 days. If you travel and miss your commute routine, the episode is there whenever you want it. You can also trigger an on-demand episode at any time from your dashboard — useful before an important meeting when you want to know what's happened in the last 24 hours.

Team configurations

The Enterprise plan enables two team configurations. In the first, each team member has their own source list, but the company defines a shared base set of sources that everyone receives. A product manager and a CFO at the same company might share five core industry sources, while each adds their own functional layer on top.

In the second configuration, a single briefing is generated from a company-defined source list and distributed to the full team. This is used by leadership teams who want to share the same information baseline before weekly meetings or planning sessions.

Both configurations are available on Enterprise at $99/mo. Contact us for onboarding.

See also: AI podcast for teams for team configuration details, AI daily briefing for individual morning routine setup, and the briefing vs. newsletter comparison if you're evaluating formats.

Start your 7-day free trial

No credit card required. Cancel any time.

Frequently asked questions

What kind of business content does the briefing cover?

Anything you define: competitor news, industry analyst reports, regulatory updates, earnings summaries, trade publication RSS feeds, business news YouTube channels, and more. You build the source list; the AI synthesizes it.

Can my team all receive the same briefing?

Team briefings are available on the Enterprise plan. Each team member can receive a shared briefing covering company-defined sources, plus their own personal additions. Contact us for team onboarding.

How do I add competitor blogs or trade publications?

Paste the RSS feed URL into ListenBrief. Most publications and blogs have an RSS feed — look for the RSS icon or append /feed, /rss, or /feed.xml to the URL.

Is there a mobile app?

The briefing is delivered as an MP3 to your email. You can listen on any device. A native mobile app with push delivery is on the roadmap for 2026.

How is this better than just reading a newsletter?

Newsletters require you to be at a screen, and you read them when convenient — which is often never. Your ListenBrief MP3 plays during your commute, run, or gym session — windows that would otherwise produce zero information intake.

Your commute deserves better than radio

Start your daily business briefing. Add your sources today, listen tomorrow morning.

Try Starter free for 7 days

No credit card required · Cancel any time