An AI daily briefing that actually fits your morning

The average American spends 86 minutes a day consuming news. Most of that is reactive — scrolling whatever surfaces. ListenBrief replaces the scroll with a focused briefing from sources you chose.

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The morning information problem isn't a shortage of content. It's the opposite. Every professional has a stack of newsletters they mean to read, a set of sites they mean to check, a handful of YouTube channels that publish smart takes. The gap between what's available and what actually gets consumed is enormous — and it widens every year.

The standard solutions make it worse. News apps surface what's viral. Aggregators mix your niche interests with noise. Newsletters pile up in your inbox unread. None of these are broken products — they're just designed for a different constraint than the one you actually have. Your constraint is time, and more specifically, the kind of time that exists in a morning: while you're getting dressed, making coffee, driving to work, or on the train.

A daily briefing delivered as an audio file solves that mismatch. It plays when you're doing something else. It ends when it ends. And if it was built from your sources, it covers your world rather than the world in aggregate.

Context: The average American spends 86 minutes per day consuming news. Research consistently shows that 68% of news consumption happens passively — while commuting, exercising, or doing household tasks. Morning routines are the highest-retention media window of the day: habits formed before 9 AM tend to stick.

Why an algorithmic feed is the wrong tool for professionals

Google News and Apple News are built around the same core mechanic: they infer your interests from your behavior and surface content accordingly. This works reasonably well for general awareness. It works poorly for anyone who needs specific, reliable coverage of a narrow domain.

If you're a fintech product manager, you don't need an algorithm to guess that you care about payments regulation and open banking. You know. And the algorithm, even if it gets it right sometimes, is also optimizing for engagement — which means it will surface controversy and novelty over substance. The publications and analysts you actually trust don't always win that competition.

ListenBrief doesn't guess. You provide a list of sources — specific RSS feeds, specific YouTube channels, specific newsletters — and your briefing covers those and nothing else. No editorial algorithm decides what's important. The AI's job is to read what your sources published, synthesize it coherently, and deliver it in a format that fits your commute.

This is a fundamentally different product philosophy. The intelligence is in your source curation, not in a recommendation engine.

Sample briefing:
AI Investor Briefing →
A sample 10-minute briefing generated from real investment and AI news sources.

What makes the morning window special

Behavioral research on daily routines consistently finds that morning habits are more durable than habits established at other times of day. The morning is structurally constrained — you have to get ready, you have a fixed departure time — which means there's a reliable window that opens and closes the same way every day.

That reliability is exactly what an audio briefing is designed for. An MP3 plays while you shower, while you eat, while you drive. It doesn't require you to sit at a desk, open an app, or decide to engage. The habit is easier to maintain because the behavior (commuting, getting ready) already exists — you're just adding audio to something you're already doing.

Contrast that with a newsletter at 7 AM. To read it, you need to be stationary, looking at a screen, choosing to spend attention on it rather than something else. In practice, most people don't. They open the email, see that it's long, and mark it for later. Later doesn't come.

Your briefings are saved in your dashboard for 30 days. If you miss a morning, the episode is there. But most users find that the audio format solves the "I'll read it later" problem by default — because you can listen now, while doing something you were going to do anyway.

Setting up your daily briefing

Onboarding takes about five minutes. You add your sources by pasting URLs — ListenBrief auto-detects RSS feeds, so you usually just paste the site's homepage. You choose your preferred briefing length (5, 10, or 30 minutes). On Pro, you pick your AI voice. Then you're done.

The first briefing generates the next morning. From that point on, you receive a new episode every morning at 6 AM UTC without doing anything else. You can add or remove sources at any time from Settings, and changes take effect in the next generation cycle.

For commuters who want to queue the episode in their car: on Pro plans, your briefing is available via a private RSS feed URL you can add to any podcast app (Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Overcast, Pocket Casts). Your new episode appears automatically each morning.

See how this compares to alternatives: personalized AI podcast covers the episode format in depth. If you're a developer or power user, AI audio briefing covers voice quality and language options. And the step-by-step setup guide walks through adding your first sources.

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Frequently asked questions

How is this different from Google News or Apple News?

Those apps show you what their algorithm thinks you want. ListenBrief generates your briefing from sources you explicitly choose — no algorithmic feed, no viral clickbait, no random headlines. Your briefing covers your world.

Can I listen while driving?

Yes. Each briefing is an MP3 — play it on your phone, car speaker, or earbuds. No screen required. Many users queue it up before they start the car.

What if I miss a day?

Your briefings are saved in your dashboard for 30 days. You can listen to any day's briefing at any time.

Can I add my company's internal sources?

You can add any URL with an RSS feed — including internal blogs, Confluence pages with feeds, or corporate newsletter links. For enterprise use cases, contact us.

How accurate is the AI content?

ListenBrief sources directly from RSS feeds and YouTube channels you add. It summarizes published content — it doesn't generate opinions or make up facts. If a source publishes something, your briefing reflects it.

Start your briefing tomorrow morning

Add your sources today. Your first briefing arrives before you wake up.

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