
Board Meeting Transcription: A Corporate Governance Guide
Board minutes are legal documents and transcripts are not minutes. How to use AI transcription responsibly in a governance workflow, plus drafting prompts.

Board meeting transcription is a tool for drafting minutes — not a replacement for them. The distinction matters because board minutes are legal documents: courts and regulators can request them during audits, litigation, and compliance reviews, and they are primary evidence that directors upheld their fiduciary duties.
So the question is not whether to transcribe board meetings. It is how to use transcription responsibly inside a proper governance framework.
Minutes vs. transcripts: the critical distinction
Minutes record what was done at a meeting, not what was said. Robert's Rules of Order is blunt about it: summarizing discussion in the minutes is not just unnecessary, it is improper.
Minutes should include: date, time, and location; directors present and absent; quorum confirmation; motions made and by whom; voting outcomes including abstentions and dissents; resolutions passed; actions authorized.
Minutes should NOT include: verbatim dialogue, detailed discussion of alternatives, individual directors' opinions (unless dissent is formally noted), off-the-record comments, or personal characterizations.
The legal reason: discussions and direct quotes can be taken out of context in hearings. Landmark cases like Smith v. Van Gorkom and the Disney derivative litigation turned on what minutes showed about the deliberative process — and the minutes that served boards well documented decisions, not every word.
Legal requirements in brief
- Sarbanes-Oxley (public companies): executive certification of reporting accuracy (§302), internal-controls oversight (§404), and documentation of material decisions. Minutes must align with public disclosures.
- State law: Delaware DGCL requires retention of meeting minutes as corporate records; California Corporations Code §1500 gives shareholders inspection rights. Most states have equivalents.
A verbatim transcript sitting in the corporate record is discoverable. That cuts both ways — it can demonstrate diligence, and it can hand opposing counsel quotes to mine. Which is why retention policy matters as much as transcription quality.
The board secretary's workflow
- Record with board consent, documented in the minutes of the meeting where consent was given.
- Transcribe promptly — TranscribeBee returns speaker-labeled transcripts in minutes at $2 per audio hour, with files auto-deleted after processing.
- Draft minutes from the transcript, extracting only the governance record: motions, votes, resolutions, authorizations.
- Destroy the transcript and recording once minutes are approved, per a written retention policy applied consistently.
AI Prompt: Resolution Extractor
From our free AI prompts library: paste the transcript and get every formal resolution, motion, mover, seconder, and voting outcome extracted into a clean list — the skeleton of compliant minutes in one pass.
AI Prompt: Board Minutes Drafting Assistant
The companion prompt drafts complete first-pass minutes in proper form — attendance, quorum, actions taken — while deliberately excluding discussion content, matching the minutes-not-transcripts standard above. The secretary edits and verifies rather than writing from scratch.
Retention and deletion policies
The consistent rule from governance counsel: keep approved minutes permanently; treat recordings and transcripts as drafting aids with a short, fixed retention window (commonly until minutes approval, sometimes 30–90 days). Whatever window you choose, write it down and apply it uniformly — selective deletion after a dispute arises looks like spoliation.
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