AI Note-Taker Pocket Raises $11mn to Capture Real-World Conversations

Pocket is a $129, credit card-shaped puck that attaches to the back of your phone and offers unlimited recordings, transcriptions, and to-do items with no monthly subscription needed.

Updated on Jun 30, 2026 10:58 AM
AI Note-Taker Pocket Raises $11mn to Capture Real-World Conversations - feature image

New Delhi: A small gadget that sticks to the back of your phone is attracting serious investor attention. Pocket, a startup making an AI-powered voice recorder, has raised $11 million from venture firm Accel, Y Combinator, and ElevenLabs CEO Mati Staniszewski.

The device is a $129, credit card-shaped puck that attaches to the back of your phone and offers unlimited recordings, transcriptions, and to-do items with no monthly subscription needed.

The idea is straightforward. Stick the device on your phone, hit record during a meeting or conversation, and let it do the rest. Users can then ask the companion app to generate meeting summaries, answer questions about past conversations, build mind maps, and reformat content using different templates.

What sets Pocket apart from most note-taking apps is its focus on offline, real-world use. Co-founder Akshay Narisetti, who previously helped build rival startup Omi, says most tools are built around online calls and not face-to-face conversations. Lawyers, salespeople, doctors, real estate agents, construction workers, and students are among those already using Pocket in the field.

The traction so far is notable. Pocket says it has sold more than 130,000 units since launching last year. For those who want more than basic transcription, a $200-per-year plan unlocks unlimited AI summaries, AI assistant queries, daily highlights, and file attachments.

Enterprise users also get custom workflow tools, webhook support, and integrations with Google Calendar, OneDrive, Google Drive, Obsidian, Claude, and Cursor, along with an MCP server to connect the AI assistant to other databases.

The company enters a busy market. Software tools like Otter, Fireflies, Granola, and Zoom already handle meeting notes digitally, while hardware rivals like Plaud, Mobvoi, and Anker are competing for the physical device space. Plaud, one of the leading players, is reportedly on track to hit $100 million in annual recurring revenue.

Still, investors believe Pocket’s combination of design, no-subscription pricing, and offline capability gives it a real edge. The new funding will likely go toward faster software development and deeper enterprise integrations as the AI note-taking race heats up.

Published on June 30, 2026

Shobhit Kalra

Chief Sub Editor

Shobhit Kalra is the Chief Sub Editor at Tea4Tech, with over 12 years of experience across digital media, digital marketing, and health technology. He is responsible for editorial review, content structuring, and quality control of articles covering software, SaaS products, and developments across the technology ecosystem. At Tea4Tech, Shobhit over...

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