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Capture Tasks From Meeting Notes

Analyze meeting notes to find action items and create Jira tasks for assigned work. When Claude needs to: (1) Create Jira tasks or tickets from meeting notes, (2) Extract or find action items from ...

AuthorAtlassian
Version1.0.0
LicenseMIT
Token count~4,372
UpdatedJun 5, 2026

Analyze meeting notes to find action items and create Jira tasks for assigned work. When Claude needs to: (1) Create Jira tasks or tickets from meeting notes, (2) Extract or find action items from notes or Confluence pages, (3) Parse meeting notes for assigned tasks, or (4) Analyze notes and generate tasks for team members. Identifies assignees, looks up account IDs, and creates tasks with proper context.

Install

Quick install

via npx skills · works with 57+ agents
npx skills add https://github.com/atlassian/atlassian-mcp-server/tree/main/skills/capture-tasks-from-meeting-notes
Or pick agent:
npx skills add atlassian/atlassian-mcp-server --skill "Capture Tasks from Meeting Notes" --agent claude-code
npx skills add atlassian/atlassian-mcp-server --skill "Capture Tasks from Meeting Notes" --agent cursor
npx skills add atlassian/atlassian-mcp-server --skill "Capture Tasks from Meeting Notes" --agent codex
npx skills add atlassian/atlassian-mcp-server --skill "Capture Tasks from Meeting Notes" --agent opencode
npx skills add atlassian/atlassian-mcp-server --skill "Capture Tasks from Meeting Notes" --agent github-copilot
npx skills add atlassian/atlassian-mcp-server --skill "Capture Tasks from Meeting Notes" --agent windsurf
More install options

Shorthand — useful for multi-skill repos:

npx skills add atlassian/atlassian-mcp-server --skill "Capture Tasks from Meeting Notes"

Manual — clone the repo and drop the folder into your agent's skills directory:

git clone https://github.com/atlassian/atlassian-mcp-server.git
cp -r atlassian-mcp-server/skills/capture-tasks-from-meeting-notes ~/.claude/skills/
How to use: Once installed, ask your agent to "use the Capture Tasks from Meeting Notes skill" or describe what you want (e.g. "Analyze meeting notes to find action items and create Jira tasks for assigned wo"). Requires Node.js 18+.

Capture Tasks from Meeting Notes

Analyze meeting notes to find action items and create Jira tasks for assigned work. When Claude needs to: (1) Create Jira tasks or tickets from meeting notes, (2) Extract or find action items from notes or Confluence pages, (3) Parse meeting notes for assigned tasks, or (4) Analyze notes and generate tasks for team members. Identifies assignees, looks up account IDs, and creates tasks with proper context.

Capture Tasks from Meeting Notesby Atlassian

Analyze meeting notes to find action items and create Jira tasks for assigned work. When Claude needs to: (1) Create Jira tasks or tickets from meeting notes, (2) Extract or find action items from notes or Confluence pages, (3) Parse meeting notes for assigned tasks, or (4) Analyze notes and generate tasks for team members. Identifies assignees, looks up account IDs, and creates tasks with proper context.

npx skills add https://github.com/atlassian/atlassian-mcp-server --skill capture-tasks-from-meeting-notesDownload ZIPGitHub

Capture Tasks from Meeting Notes

Keywords

meeting notes, action items, create tasks, create tickets, extract tasks, parse notes, analyze notes, assigned work, assignees, from meeting, post-meeting, capture tasks, generate tasks, turn into tasks, convert to tasks, action item, to-do, task list, follow-up, assigned to, create Jira tasks, create Jira tickets, meeting action items, extract action items, find action items, analyze meeting

Overview

Automatically extract action items from meeting notes and create Jira tasks with proper assignees. This skill parses unstructured meeting notes (from Confluence or pasted text), identifies action items with assignees, looks up Jira account IDs, and creates tasks—eliminating the tedious post-meeting ticket creation process.

Use this skill when: Users have meeting notes with action items that need to become Jira tasks.

Workflow

Follow this 7-step process to turn meeting notes into actionable Jira tasks:

Step 1: Get Meeting Notes

Obtain the meeting notes from the user.

Option A: Confluence Page URL
If user provides a Confluence URL:

`getConfluencePage(
cloudId="...",
pageId="[extracted from URL]",
contentFormat="markdown"
)
`

URL patterns:

  • https://[site].atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/[SPACE]/pages/[PAGE_ID]/[title]
  • Extract PAGE_ID from the numeric portion
  • Get cloudId from site name or use getAccessibleAtlassianResources

Option B: Pasted Text
If user pastes meeting notes directly:

  • Use the text as-is
  • No fetching needed

If Unclear
Ask: "Do you have a Confluence link to the meeting notes, or would you like to paste them directly?"

Step 2: Parse Action Items

Scan the notes for action items with assignees.

Common Patterns
Pattern 1: @mention format (highest priority)

`@Sarah to create user stories for chat feature
@Mike will update architecture doc
`

Pattern 2: Name + action verb

`Sarah to create user stories
Mike will update architecture doc
Lisa should review the mockups
`

Pattern 3: Action: Name - Task

`Action: Sarah - create user stories
Action Item: Mike - update architecture
`

Pattern 4: TODO with assignee

`TODO: Create user stories (Sarah)
TODO: Update docs - Mike
`

Pattern 5: Bullet with name

`- Sarah: create user stories
- Mike - update architecture
`

Extraction Logic
For each action item, extract:

*
Assignee Name

  • Text after @ symbol
  • Name before "to", "will", "should"
  • Name after "Action:" or in parentheses
  • First/last name or full name

*
Task Description

  • Text after "to", "will", "should", "-", ":"
  • Remove markers (@, Action:, TODO:)
  • Keep original wording
  • Include enough context

*
Context (optional but helpful)

  • Meeting title/date if available
  • Surrounding discussion context
  • Related decisions

Example Parsing
Input:

`# Product Planning - Dec 3

Action Items:
- @Sarah to create user stories for chat feature
- Mike will update the architecture doc
- Lisa: review and approve design mockups
`

Parsed:

`1. Assignee: Sarah
Task: Create user stories for chat feature
Context: Product Planning meeting - Dec 3

2. Assignee: Mike
Task: Update the architecture doc
Context: Product Planning meeting - Dec 3

3. Assignee: Lisa
Task: Review and approve design mockups
Context: Product Planning meeting - Dec 3
`

Step 3: Ask for Project Key

Before looking up users or creating tasks, identify the Jira project.

Ask: "Which Jira project should I create these tasks in? (e.g., PROJ, PRODUCT, ENG)"

If User is Unsure
Call getVisibleJiraProjects to show options:

`getVisibleJiraProjects(
cloudId="...",
action="create"
)
`

Present: "I found these projects you can create tasks in: PROJ (Project Alpha), PRODUCT (Product Team), ENG (Engineering)"

Step 4: Lookup Account IDs

For each assignee name, find their Jira account ID.

Lookup Process

`lookupJiraAccountId(
cloudId="...",
searchString="[assignee name]"
)
`

The search string can be:

  • Full name: "Sarah Johnson"
  • First name: "Sarah"
  • Last name: "Johnson"
  • Email: "[email protected]"

Handle Results
Scenario A: Exact Match (1 result)

`✅ Found: Sarah Johnson ([email protected])
→ Use accountId from result
`

Scenario B: No Match (0 results)

`⚠️ Couldn't find user "Sarah" in Jira.

Options:
1. Create task unassigned (assign manually later)
2. Skip this task
3. Try different name format (e.g., "Sarah Johnson")

Which would you prefer?
`

Scenario C: Multiple Matches (2+ results)

`⚠️ Found multiple users named "Sarah":
1. Sarah Johnson ([email protected])
2. Sarah Smith ([email protected])

Which user should be assigned the task "Create user stories"?
`

Best Practices

  • Try full name first ("Sarah Johnson")
  • If no match, try first name only ("Sarah")
  • If still no match, ask user
  • Cache results (don't lookup same person twice)

Step 5: Present Action Items

CRITICAL: Always show the parsed action items to the user BEFORE creating any tasks.

Presentation Format

`I found [N] action items from the meeting notes. Should I create these Jira tasks in [PROJECT]?

1. [TASK] [Task description]
Assigned to: [Name] ([email if found])
Context: [Meeting title/date]

2. [TASK] [Task description]
Assigned to: [Name] ([email if found])
Context: [Meeting title/date]

[...continue for all tasks...]

Would you like me to:
1. Create all tasks
2. Skip some tasks (which ones?)
3. Modify any descriptions or assignees
`

Wait for Confirmation
Do NOT create tasks until user confirms. Options:

  • "Yes, create all" → proceed
  • "Skip task 3" → create all except #3
  • "Change assignee for task 2" → ask for new assignee
  • "Edit description" → ask for changes

Step 6: Create Tasks

Once confirmed, create each Jira task.

Determine Issue Type
Before creating tasks, check what issue types are available in the project:

`getJiraProjectIssueTypesMetadata(
cloudId="...",
projectIdOrKey="PROJ"
)
`

Choose the appropriate issue type:

  • Use "Task" if available (most common)
  • Use "Story" for user-facing features
  • Use "Bug" if it's a defect
  • If "Task" doesn't exist, use the first available issue type or ask the user

For Each Action Item

`createJiraIssue(
cloudId="...",
projectKey="PROJ",
issueTypeName="[Task or available type]",
summary="[Task description]",
description="[Full description with context]",
assignee_account_id="[looked up account ID]"
)
`

Task Summary Format
Use action verbs and be specific:

  • ✅ "Create user stories for chat feature"
  • ✅ "Update architecture documentation"
  • ✅ "Review and approve design mockups"
  • ❌ "Do the thing" (too vague)

Task Description Format

`**Action Item from Meeting Notes**

**Task:** [Original action item text]

**Context:**
[Meeting title/date]
[Relevant discussion points or decisions]

**Source:** [Link to Confluence meeting notes if available]

**Original Note:**
> [Exact quote from meeting notes]
`

Example:

`**Action Item from Meeting Notes**

**Task:** Create user stories for chat feature

**Context:**
Product Planning Meeting - December 3, 2025
Discussed Q1 roadmap priorities and new feature requirements

**Source:** https://yoursite.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/TEAM/pages/12345

**Original Note:**
> @Sarah to create user stories for chat feature
`

Step 7: Provide Summary

After all tasks are created, present a comprehensive summary.

Format:

`✅ Created [N] tasks in [PROJECT]:

1. [PROJ-123] - [Task summary]
Assigned to: [Name]
https://yoursite.atlassian.net/browse/PROJ-123

2. [PROJ-124] - [Task summary]
Assigned to: [Name]
https://yoursite.atlassian.net/browse/PROJ-124

[...continue for all created tasks...]

**Source:** [Link to meeting notes]

**Next Steps:**
- Review tasks in Jira for accuracy
- Add any additional details or attachments
- Adjust priorities if needed
- Link related tickets if applicable
`

Action Item Pattern Examples

Pattern 1: @Mentions (Most Explicit)

`@john to update documentation
@sarah will create the report
@mike should review PR #123
`

Parsed:

  • Assignee: john/sarah/mike
  • Task: update documentation / create the report / review PR #123

Pattern 2: Name + Action Verb

`John to update documentation
Sarah will create the report
Mike should review PR #123
Lisa needs to test the feature
`

Parsed:

  • Assignee: name before action verb
  • Task: text after "to/will/should/needs to"

Pattern 3: Structured Action Format

`Action: John - update documentation
Action Item: Sarah - create the report
AI: Mike - review PR #123
`

Parsed:

  • Assignee: name after "Action:" and before "-"
  • Task: text after "-"

Pattern 4: TODO Format

`TODO: Update documentation (John)
TODO: Create report - Sarah
[ ] Mike: review PR #123
`

Parsed:

  • Assignee: name in parentheses or after ":"
  • Task: text between TODO and assignee

Pattern 5: Bullet Lists

`- John: update documentation
- Sarah - create the report
* Mike will review PR #123
`

Parsed:

  • Assignee: name before ":" or "-" or action verb
  • Task: remaining text

Handling Edge Cases

No Action Items Found

If no action items with assignees are detected:

`I analyzed the meeting notes but couldn't find any action items with clear assignees.

Action items typically follow patterns like:
- @Name to do X
- Name will do X
- Action: Name - do X
- TODO: X (Name)

Options:
1. I can search for TODO items without assignees
2. You can point out specific action items to create
3. I can create tasks for bullet points you specify

What would you like to do?
`

Mixed Formats

If some action items have assignees and some don't:

`I found [N] action items:
- [X] with clear assignees
- [Y] without assignees

Should I:
1. Create all [N] tasks ([X] assigned, [Y] unassigned)
2. Only create the [X] tasks with assignees
3. Ask you to assign the [Y] unassigned tasks

Which option would you prefer?
`

Assignee Name Variations

If the same person is mentioned different ways:

`Notes mention: @sarah, Sarah, Sarah J.

These likely refer to the same person. I'll look up "Sarah" once and use
that account ID for all three mentions. Is that correct?
`

Duplicate Action Items

If the same task appears multiple times:

`I found what appears to be the same action item twice:
1. "@Sarah to create user stories" (line 15)
2. "Action: Sarah - create user stories" (line 42)

Should I:
1. Create one task (combine duplicates)
2. Create two separate tasks
3. Skip the duplicate

What would you prefer?
`

Long Task Descriptions

If action item text is very long (>200 characters):

`The task "[long text...]" is quite detailed.

Should I:
1. Use first sentence as summary, rest in description
2. Use full text as summary
3. Let you edit it to be more concise

Which would you prefer?
`

Tips for High-Quality Results

Do:

✅ Use consistent @mention format in notes

✅ Include full names when possible

✅ Be specific in action item descriptions

✅ Add context (why/what/when)

✅ Review parsed tasks before confirming

Don't:

❌ Mix multiple tasks for one person in one bullet

❌ Use ambiguous names (just "John" if you have 5 Johns)

❌ Skip action verbs (unclear what to do)

❌ Forget to specify project

Best Meeting Notes Format

`# Meeting Title - Date

Attendees: [Names]

## Decisions
[What was decided]

## Action Items
- @FullName to [specific task with context]
- @AnotherPerson will [specific task with context]
- etc.
`

When NOT to Use This Skill

This skill is for converting meeting action items to Jira tasks only.

Don't use for:
❌ Summarizing meetings (no task creation)

❌ Finding meeting notes (use search skill)

❌ Creating calendar events

❌ Sending meeting notes via email

❌ General note-taking

Use only when: Meeting notes exist and action items need to become Jira tasks.

Examples

Example 1: Simple @Mentions

Input:

`Team Sync - Dec 3, 2025

Action Items:
- @Sarah to create user stories for chat feature
- @Mike will update the architecture doc
- @Lisa should review design mockups
`

Process:

  • Parse → 3 action items found
  • Project → "PROJ"
  • Lookup → Sarah (123), Mike (456), Lisa (789)
  • Present → User confirms
  • Create → PROJ-100, PROJ-101, PROJ-102

Output:

`✅ Created 3 tasks in PROJ:

1. PROJ-100 - Create user stories for chat feature
Assigned to: Sarah Johnson

2. PROJ-101 - Update the architecture doc
Assigned to: Mike Chen

3. PROJ-102 - Review design mockups
Assigned to: Lisa Park
`

Example 2: Mixed Formats

Input:

`Product Review Meeting

Discussed new features and priorities.

Follow-ups:
- Sarah will draft the PRD
- Mike: implement API changes
- TODO: Review security audit (Lisa)
- Update stakeholders on timeline
`

Process:

  • Parse → Found 4 items (3 with assignees, 1 without)
  • Ask → "Found 3 with assignees, 1 without. Create all or only assigned?"
  • User → "All, make the last one unassigned"
  • Create → 4 tasks (3 assigned, 1 unassigned)

Example 3: Name Lookup Issue

Input:

`Sprint Planning

Action Items:
- @John to update tests
- @Sarah to refactor code
`

Process:

  • Parse → 2 action items
  • Lookup "John" → Found 3 Johns!
  • Ask → "Which John? (John Smith, John Doe, John Wilson)"
  • User → "John Smith"
  • Create → Both tasks assigned correctly

Quick Reference

Primary tool: getConfluencePage (if URL) or use pasted text

Account lookup: lookupJiraAccountId(searchString)

Task creation: createJiraIssue with assignee_account_id

Action patterns to look for:

  • @Name to/will/should X
  • Name to/will/should X
  • Action: Name - X
  • TODO: X (Name)
  • Name: X

Always:

  • Present parsed tasks before creating
  • Handle name lookup failures gracefully
  • Include context in task descriptions
  • Provide summary with links

Remember:

  • Human-in-loop is critical (show before creating)
  • Name lookup can fail (have fallback)
  • Be flexible with pattern matching
  • Context preservation is important

More skills from Atlassian

Generate Status Reportby AtlassianGenerate project status reports from Jira issues and publish to Confluence. When Claude needs to: (1) Create a status report for a project, (2) Summarize project progress or updates, (3) Generate weekly/daily reports from Jira, (4) Publish status summaries to Confluence, or (5) Analyze project blockers and completion. Queries Jira issues, categorizes by status/priority, and creates formatted reports for delivery managers and executives.Search Company Knowledgeby AtlassianSearch across company knowledge bases (Confluence, Jira, internal docs) to find and explain internal concepts, processes, and technical details. When Claude needs to: (1) Find or search for information about systems, terminology, processes, deployment, authentication, infrastructure, architecture, or technical concepts, (2) Search internal documentation, knowledge base, company docs, or our docs, (3) Explain what something is, how it works, or look up information, or (4) Synthesize information from multiple sources. Searches in parallel and provides cited answers.Spec to Backlogby AtlassianAutomatically convert Confluence specification documents into structured Jira backlogs with Epics and implementation tickets. When Claude needs to: (1) Create Jira tickets from a Confluence page, (2) Generate a backlog from a specification, (3) Break down a spec into implementation tasks, or (4) Convert requirements into Jira issues. Handles reading Confluence pages, analyzing specifications, creating Epics with proper structure, and generating detailed implementation tickets linked to the Epic.Triage Issueby AtlassianIntelligently triage bug reports and error messages by searching for duplicates in Jira and offering to create new issues or add comments to existing ones. When Claude needs to: (1) Triage a bug report or error message, (2) Check if an issue is a duplicate, (3) Find similar past issues, (4) Create a new bug ticket with proper context, or (5) Add information to an existing ticket. Searches Jira for similar issues, identifies duplicates, checks fix history, and helps create well-structured bug reports.

---

Source: https://github.com/atlassian/atlassian-mcp-server/tree/main/skills/capture-tasks-from-meeting-notes
Author: Atlassian
Discovered via: mcpservers.org

SKILL.md source

---
name: Capture Tasks from Meeting Notes
description: Analyze meeting notes to find action items and create Jira tasks for assigned work. When Claude needs to: (1) Create Jira tasks or tickets from meeting notes, (2) Extract or find action items from ...
---

# Capture Tasks from Meeting Notes

Analyze meeting notes to find action items and create Jira tasks for assigned work. When Claude needs to: (1) Create Jira tasks or tickets from meeting notes, (2) Extract or find action items from notes or Confluence pages, (3) Parse meeting notes for assigned tasks, or (4) Analyze notes and generate tasks for team members. Identifies assignees, looks up account IDs, and creates tasks with proper context.

# Capture Tasks from Meeting Notesby Atlassian
Analyze meeting notes to find action items and create Jira tasks for assigned work. When Claude needs to: (1) Create Jira tasks or tickets from meeting notes, (2) Extract or find action items from notes or Confluence pages, (3) Parse meeting notes for assigned tasks, or (4) Analyze notes and generate tasks for team members. Identifies assignees, looks up account IDs, and creates tasks with proper context.

`npx skills add https://github.com/atlassian/atlassian-mcp-server --skill capture-tasks-from-meeting-notes`Download ZIPGitHub

## Capture Tasks from Meeting Notes

## Keywords

meeting notes, action items, create tasks, create tickets, extract tasks, parse notes, analyze notes, assigned work, assignees, from meeting, post-meeting, capture tasks, generate tasks, turn into tasks, convert to tasks, action item, to-do, task list, follow-up, assigned to, create Jira tasks, create Jira tickets, meeting action items, extract action items, find action items, analyze meeting

## Overview

Automatically extract action items from meeting notes and create Jira tasks with proper assignees. This skill parses unstructured meeting notes (from Confluence or pasted text), identifies action items with assignees, looks up Jira account IDs, and creates tasks—eliminating the tedious post-meeting ticket creation process.

Use this skill when: Users have meeting notes with action items that need to become Jira tasks.

## Workflow

Follow this 7-step process to turn meeting notes into actionable Jira tasks:

### Step 1: Get Meeting Notes

Obtain the meeting notes from the user.

Option A: Confluence Page URL
If user provides a Confluence URL:

```
`getConfluencePage(
cloudId="...",
pageId="[extracted from URL]",
contentFormat="markdown"
)
`
```

URL patterns:

* `https://[site].atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/[SPACE]/pages/[PAGE_ID]/[title]`

* Extract PAGE_ID from the numeric portion

* Get cloudId from site name or use `getAccessibleAtlassianResources`

Option B: Pasted Text
If user pastes meeting notes directly:

* Use the text as-is

* No fetching needed

If Unclear
Ask: "Do you have a Confluence link to the meeting notes, or would you like to paste them directly?"

### Step 2: Parse Action Items

Scan the notes for action items with assignees.

Common Patterns
Pattern 1: @mention format (highest priority)

```
`@Sarah to create user stories for chat feature
@Mike will update architecture doc
`
```

Pattern 2: Name + action verb

```
`Sarah to create user stories
Mike will update architecture doc
Lisa should review the mockups
`
```

Pattern 3: Action: Name - Task

```
`Action: Sarah - create user stories
Action Item: Mike - update architecture
`
```

Pattern 4: TODO with assignee

```
`TODO: Create user stories (Sarah)
TODO: Update docs - Mike
`
```

Pattern 5: Bullet with name

```
`- Sarah: create user stories
- Mike - update architecture
`
```

Extraction Logic
For each action item, extract:

*
Assignee Name

* Text after @ symbol

* Name before "to", "will", "should"

* Name after "Action:" or in parentheses

* First/last name or full name

*
Task Description

* Text after "to", "will", "should", "-", ":"

* Remove markers (@, Action:, TODO:)

* Keep original wording

* Include enough context

*
Context (optional but helpful)

* Meeting title/date if available

* Surrounding discussion context

* Related decisions

Example Parsing
Input:

```
`# Product Planning - Dec 3

Action Items:
- @Sarah to create user stories for chat feature
- Mike will update the architecture doc
- Lisa: review and approve design mockups
`
```

Parsed:

```
`1. Assignee: Sarah
Task: Create user stories for chat feature
Context: Product Planning meeting - Dec 3

2. Assignee: Mike
Task: Update the architecture doc
Context: Product Planning meeting - Dec 3

3. Assignee: Lisa
Task: Review and approve design mockups
Context: Product Planning meeting - Dec 3
`
```

### Step 3: Ask for Project Key

Before looking up users or creating tasks, identify the Jira project.

Ask: "Which Jira project should I create these tasks in? (e.g., PROJ, PRODUCT, ENG)"

If User is Unsure
Call `getVisibleJiraProjects` to show options:

```
`getVisibleJiraProjects(
cloudId="...",
action="create"
)
`
```

Present: "I found these projects you can create tasks in: PROJ (Project Alpha), PRODUCT (Product Team), ENG (Engineering)"

### Step 4: Lookup Account IDs

For each assignee name, find their Jira account ID.

Lookup Process

```
`lookupJiraAccountId(
cloudId="...",
searchString="[assignee name]"
)
`
```

The search string can be:

* Full name: "Sarah Johnson"

* First name: "Sarah"

* Last name: "Johnson"

* Email: "[email protected]"

Handle Results
Scenario A: Exact Match (1 result)

```
`✅ Found: Sarah Johnson ([email protected])
→ Use accountId from result
`
```

Scenario B: No Match (0 results)

```
`⚠️ Couldn't find user "Sarah" in Jira.

Options:
1. Create task unassigned (assign manually later)
2. Skip this task
3. Try different name format (e.g., "Sarah Johnson")

Which would you prefer?
`
```

Scenario C: Multiple Matches (2+ results)

```
`⚠️ Found multiple users named "Sarah":
1. Sarah Johnson ([email protected])
2. Sarah Smith ([email protected])

Which user should be assigned the task "Create user stories"?
`
```

Best Practices

* Try full name first ("Sarah Johnson")

* If no match, try first name only ("Sarah")

* If still no match, ask user

* Cache results (don't lookup same person twice)

### Step 5: Present Action Items

CRITICAL: Always show the parsed action items to the user BEFORE creating any tasks.

Presentation Format

```
`I found [N] action items from the meeting notes. Should I create these Jira tasks in [PROJECT]?

1. [TASK] [Task description]
Assigned to: [Name] ([email if found])
Context: [Meeting title/date]

2. [TASK] [Task description]
Assigned to: [Name] ([email if found])
Context: [Meeting title/date]

[...continue for all tasks...]

Would you like me to:
1. Create all tasks
2. Skip some tasks (which ones?)
3. Modify any descriptions or assignees
`
```

Wait for Confirmation
Do NOT create tasks until user confirms. Options:

* "Yes, create all" → proceed

* "Skip task 3" → create all except #3

* "Change assignee for task 2" → ask for new assignee

* "Edit description" → ask for changes

### Step 6: Create Tasks

Once confirmed, create each Jira task.

Determine Issue Type
Before creating tasks, check what issue types are available in the project:

```
`getJiraProjectIssueTypesMetadata(
cloudId="...",
projectIdOrKey="PROJ"
)
`
```

Choose the appropriate issue type:

* Use "Task" if available (most common)

* Use "Story" for user-facing features

* Use "Bug" if it's a defect

* If "Task" doesn't exist, use the first available issue type or ask the user

For Each Action Item

```
`createJiraIssue(
cloudId="...",
projectKey="PROJ",
issueTypeName="[Task or available type]",
summary="[Task description]",
description="[Full description with context]",
assignee_account_id="[looked up account ID]"
)
`
```

Task Summary Format
Use action verbs and be specific:

* ✅ "Create user stories for chat feature"

* ✅ "Update architecture documentation"

* ✅ "Review and approve design mockups"

* ❌ "Do the thing" (too vague)

Task Description Format

```
`**Action Item from Meeting Notes**

**Task:** [Original action item text]

**Context:**
[Meeting title/date]
[Relevant discussion points or decisions]

**Source:** [Link to Confluence meeting notes if available]

**Original Note:**
> [Exact quote from meeting notes]
`
```

Example:

```
`**Action Item from Meeting Notes**

**Task:** Create user stories for chat feature

**Context:**
Product Planning Meeting - December 3, 2025
Discussed Q1 roadmap priorities and new feature requirements

**Source:** https://yoursite.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/TEAM/pages/12345

**Original Note:**
> @Sarah to create user stories for chat feature
`
```

### Step 7: Provide Summary

After all tasks are created, present a comprehensive summary.

Format:

```
`✅ Created [N] tasks in [PROJECT]:

1. [PROJ-123] - [Task summary]
Assigned to: [Name]
https://yoursite.atlassian.net/browse/PROJ-123

2. [PROJ-124] - [Task summary]
Assigned to: [Name]
https://yoursite.atlassian.net/browse/PROJ-124

[...continue for all created tasks...]

**Source:** [Link to meeting notes]

**Next Steps:**
- Review tasks in Jira for accuracy
- Add any additional details or attachments
- Adjust priorities if needed
- Link related tickets if applicable
`
```

## Action Item Pattern Examples

### Pattern 1: @Mentions (Most Explicit)

```
`@john to update documentation
@sarah will create the report
@mike should review PR #123
`
```

Parsed:

* Assignee: john/sarah/mike

* Task: update documentation / create the report / review PR #123

### Pattern 2: Name + Action Verb

```
`John to update documentation
Sarah will create the report
Mike should review PR #123
Lisa needs to test the feature
`
```

Parsed:

* Assignee: name before action verb

* Task: text after "to/will/should/needs to"

### Pattern 3: Structured Action Format

```
`Action: John - update documentation
Action Item: Sarah - create the report
AI: Mike - review PR #123
`
```

Parsed:

* Assignee: name after "Action:" and before "-"

* Task: text after "-"

### Pattern 4: TODO Format

```
`TODO: Update documentation (John)
TODO: Create report - Sarah
[ ] Mike: review PR #123
`
```

Parsed:

* Assignee: name in parentheses or after ":"

* Task: text between TODO and assignee

### Pattern 5: Bullet Lists

```
`- John: update documentation
- Sarah - create the report
* Mike will review PR #123
`
```

Parsed:

* Assignee: name before ":" or "-" or action verb

* Task: remaining text

## Handling Edge Cases

### No Action Items Found

If no action items with assignees are detected:

```
`I analyzed the meeting notes but couldn't find any action items with clear assignees.

Action items typically follow patterns like:
- @Name to do X
- Name will do X
- Action: Name - do X
- TODO: X (Name)

Options:
1. I can search for TODO items without assignees
2. You can point out specific action items to create
3. I can create tasks for bullet points you specify

What would you like to do?
`
```

### Mixed Formats

If some action items have assignees and some don't:

```
`I found [N] action items:
- [X] with clear assignees
- [Y] without assignees

Should I:
1. Create all [N] tasks ([X] assigned, [Y] unassigned)
2. Only create the [X] tasks with assignees
3. Ask you to assign the [Y] unassigned tasks

Which option would you prefer?
`
```

### Assignee Name Variations

If the same person is mentioned different ways:

```
`Notes mention: @sarah, Sarah, Sarah J.

These likely refer to the same person. I'll look up "Sarah" once and use
that account ID for all three mentions. Is that correct?
`
```

### Duplicate Action Items

If the same task appears multiple times:

```
`I found what appears to be the same action item twice:
1. "@Sarah to create user stories" (line 15)
2. "Action: Sarah - create user stories" (line 42)

Should I:
1. Create one task (combine duplicates)
2. Create two separate tasks
3. Skip the duplicate

What would you prefer?
`
```

### Long Task Descriptions

If action item text is very long (>200 characters):

```
`The task "[long text...]" is quite detailed.

Should I:
1. Use first sentence as summary, rest in description
2. Use full text as summary
3. Let you edit it to be more concise

Which would you prefer?
`
```

## Tips for High-Quality Results

### Do:

✅ Use consistent @mention format in notes

✅ Include full names when possible

✅ Be specific in action item descriptions

✅ Add context (why/what/when)

✅ Review parsed tasks before confirming

### Don't:

❌ Mix multiple tasks for one person in one bullet

❌ Use ambiguous names (just "John" if you have 5 Johns)

❌ Skip action verbs (unclear what to do)

❌ Forget to specify project

### Best Meeting Notes Format

```
`# Meeting Title - Date

Attendees: [Names]

## Decisions
[What was decided]

## Action Items
- @FullName to [specific task with context]
- @AnotherPerson will [specific task with context]
- etc.
`
```

## When NOT to Use This Skill

This skill is for converting meeting action items to Jira tasks only.

Don't use for:
❌ Summarizing meetings (no task creation)

❌ Finding meeting notes (use search skill)

❌ Creating calendar events

❌ Sending meeting notes via email

❌ General note-taking

Use only when: Meeting notes exist and action items need to become Jira tasks.

## Examples

### Example 1: Simple @Mentions

Input:

```
`Team Sync - Dec 3, 2025

Action Items:
- @Sarah to create user stories for chat feature
- @Mike will update the architecture doc
- @Lisa should review design mockups
`
```

Process:

* Parse → 3 action items found

* Project → "PROJ"

* Lookup → Sarah (123), Mike (456), Lisa (789)

* Present → User confirms

* Create → PROJ-100, PROJ-101, PROJ-102

Output:

```
`✅ Created 3 tasks in PROJ:

1. PROJ-100 - Create user stories for chat feature
Assigned to: Sarah Johnson

2. PROJ-101 - Update the architecture doc
Assigned to: Mike Chen

3. PROJ-102 - Review design mockups
Assigned to: Lisa Park
`
```

### Example 2: Mixed Formats

Input:

```
`Product Review Meeting

Discussed new features and priorities.

Follow-ups:
- Sarah will draft the PRD
- Mike: implement API changes
- TODO: Review security audit (Lisa)
- Update stakeholders on timeline
`
```

Process:

* Parse → Found 4 items (3 with assignees, 1 without)

* Ask → "Found 3 with assignees, 1 without. Create all or only assigned?"

* User → "All, make the last one unassigned"

* Create → 4 tasks (3 assigned, 1 unassigned)

### Example 3: Name Lookup Issue

Input:

```
`Sprint Planning

Action Items:
- @John to update tests
- @Sarah to refactor code
`
```

Process:

* Parse → 2 action items

* Lookup "John" → Found 3 Johns!

* Ask → "Which John? (John Smith, John Doe, John Wilson)"

* User → "John Smith"

* Create → Both tasks assigned correctly

## Quick Reference

Primary tool: `getConfluencePage` (if URL) or use pasted text

Account lookup: `lookupJiraAccountId(searchString)`

Task creation: `createJiraIssue` with `assignee_account_id`

Action patterns to look for:

* `@Name to/will/should X`

* `Name to/will/should X`

* `Action: Name - X`

* `TODO: X (Name)`

* `Name: X`

Always:

* Present parsed tasks before creating

* Handle name lookup failures gracefully

* Include context in task descriptions

* Provide summary with links

Remember:

* Human-in-loop is critical (show before creating)

* Name lookup can fail (have fallback)

* Be flexible with pattern matching

* Context preservation is important

## More skills from Atlassian
Generate Status Reportby AtlassianGenerate project status reports from Jira issues and publish to Confluence. When Claude needs to: (1) Create a status report for a project, (2) Summarize project progress or updates, (3) Generate weekly/daily reports from Jira, (4) Publish status summaries to Confluence, or (5) Analyze project blockers and completion. Queries Jira issues, categorizes by status/priority, and creates formatted reports for delivery managers and executives.Search Company Knowledgeby AtlassianSearch across company knowledge bases (Confluence, Jira, internal docs) to find and explain internal concepts, processes, and technical details. When Claude needs to: (1) Find or search for information about systems, terminology, processes, deployment, authentication, infrastructure, architecture, or technical concepts, (2) Search internal documentation, knowledge base, company docs, or our docs, (3) Explain what something is, how it works, or look up information, or (4) Synthesize information from multiple sources. Searches in parallel and provides cited answers.Spec to Backlogby AtlassianAutomatically convert Confluence specification documents into structured Jira backlogs with Epics and implementation tickets. When Claude needs to: (1) Create Jira tickets from a Confluence page, (2) Generate a backlog from a specification, (3) Break down a spec into implementation tasks, or (4) Convert requirements into Jira issues. Handles reading Confluence pages, analyzing specifications, creating Epics with proper structure, and generating detailed implementation tickets linked to the Epic.Triage Issueby AtlassianIntelligently triage bug reports and error messages by searching for duplicates in Jira and offering to create new issues or add comments to existing ones. When Claude needs to: (1) Triage a bug report or error message, (2) Check if an issue is a duplicate, (3) Find similar past issues, (4) Create a new bug ticket with proper context, or (5) Add information to an existing ticket. Searches Jira for similar issues, identifies duplicates, checks fix history, and helps create well-structured bug reports.

---

**Source**: https://github.com/atlassian/atlassian-mcp-server/tree/main/skills/capture-tasks-from-meeting-notes
**Author**: Atlassian
**Discovered via**: mcpservers.org

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