--- title: 'Pavleur vs Fellow — Meeting Copilot Compared' excerpt: 'How Pavleur compares to Fellow for meeting notes and agendas: privacy-first local capture, video and screenshots, and automatic post-meeting reports.' date: '2026-07-09T00:00:00.000Z' lastModified: '2026-07-09' author: 'Pavleur Team' tags: ['comparisons', 'meeting-ai'] keywords: [ 'pavleur vs fellow', 'fellow.app alternative', 'meeting management comparison', 'privacy-first meeting copilot', 'automatic meeting report', ] competitor: 'Fellow' competitorUrl: 'https://fellow.app' verdict: 'Fellow is a meeting-management app built around agendas, collaborative notes, and action items. Choose Pavleur when you want privacy-first local capture, video and on-screen screenshots in the record, and automatic post-meeting reports that improve over time.' tldr: 'Fellow is a meeting-management app centered on agendas, shared notes, and action-item tracking. Pavleur is a privacy-first desktop meeting copilot: it captures the meeting locally, keeps video and on-screen screenshots, and writes automatic post-meeting reports. This page frames how Pavleur compares and when each fits.' keyTakeaways: - 'Fellow is a meeting-management app for agendas and collaborative notes; Pavleur is a privacy-first desktop capture copilot' - 'Pavleur records the meeting itself — audio, video, and on-screen screenshots — so nothing said or shown is lost' - 'Pavleur writes automatic post-meeting reports and improves at your recurring meetings over time' - 'Fellow may fit better if structured agendas and collaborative note-taking workflows are your priority' --- ## How Pavleur compares to Fellow Fellow is a meeting-management app. Its center of gravity is the workflow _around_ a meeting: building agendas, taking collaborative notes, and tracking action items so meetings are more structured and follow-ups do not fall through. Teams that want more disciplined meetings often reach for it. Pavleur solves an adjacent but different problem. It is a **privacy-first desktop meeting copilot** that captures the meeting itself — locally, including what happens on screen — and writes an automatic report afterward. This page is an honest framing of how the two compare and when each is the right pick. Confirm Fellow's current pricing and exact features on their own site. ## What Pavleur does differently ### It captures the meeting, not just the notes about it Fellow is strong at the human workflow around a meeting — agenda in, notes and decisions out, action items tracked. Pavleur captures the **meeting itself**: the audio, the video, and the on-screen screenshots. If someone demos a workflow or shares a slide, that is in Pavleur's record. Collaborative note-taking depends on someone typing the important part down; Pavleur keeps the source material regardless. ### Privacy-first local capture Pavleur runs on the desktop and captures on your own machine. For teams weighing where meeting content is stored, local-first capture is a core distinction. ### No meeting-information loss Because Pavleur keeps the full record, the exact ask, the specific objection, and the shared screen are all preserved — not dependent on whether a note-taker caught them in the moment. You review the real meeting. ### Automatic post-meeting reports that improve over time After each call, Pavleur writes an automatic report — decisions, action items, next steps — from the actual recording, and it **auto-improves** at your recurring meetings over time. This is where the two approaches diverge most. A collaborative-notes workflow is only as complete as the attention of the people typing during the call; when the conversation moves fast, or when the substance is on a shared screen, the notes thin out exactly when the meeting matters most. Because Pavleur's report is generated from the recording, it does not depend on someone staying on top of note-taking while also trying to participate. For recurring meetings the effect compounds — the report gets sharper at the calls you actually repeat. ## Who each is for **Fellow is a fit if** your priority is the meeting _process_: shared agendas, collaborative live notes, and action-item tracking to make meetings more disciplined, and you are happy to have people capture the substance by typing it. **Pavleur is a fit if** you want the meeting itself captured — including screens shared — with privacy-first local capture, and you want an automatic report generated from the recording rather than from hand-typed notes. ## When Fellow might fit better The fair version: Fellow and Pavleur are not the same category. If what you actually want is a **structured meeting-management workflow** — agenda templates, collaborative note-taking, and action-item tracking embedded in how your team runs meetings — Fellow is built squarely for that, and Pavleur is not a drop-in replacement for that agenda-and-collaboration layer. Many teams could even use both: Fellow for the agenda workflow, Pavleur to capture and report on what was actually said and shown. Pavleur's edge is capturing the real meeting — privacy-first, with video and on-screen screenshots — and turning it into an automatic report that compounds over time. ## FAQ ## Is Pavleur a Fellow alternative? Partly. They overlap on producing meeting notes and action items, but they sit in different categories: Fellow is a meeting-management app for agendas and collaborative notes, while Pavleur is a privacy-first desktop copilot that captures the meeting itself and writes automatic reports. ## What is the main difference between Pavleur and Fellow? Fellow focuses on the workflow around a meeting — agendas, shared notes, action items. Pavleur focuses on capturing the meeting itself, including video and on-screen screenshots, and generating an automatic report from the recording. ## Can I use Pavleur and Fellow together? Yes. Some teams use a meeting-management app for agendas and collaborative notes while using Pavleur to capture and report on what was actually said and shown. They address different parts of the meeting workflow. ## Explore more See how Pavleur fits different roles on the [for-teams pages](/for), browse ready-made agendas in [meeting templates](/meeting-templates), or compare Pavleur against [other meeting tools](/compare).