When your daily brief arrives
Your daily brief is event-driven, not set to a clock time. MailOver generates a brief when your secretary finishes processing a fresh batch of mail, and the first one arrives about three minutes after your first sync finishes. There is no send-time setting, and the number of briefs each day is capped by your plan.
A brief follows the mail, not the clock
MailOver does not send your brief at a fixed time you choose. A brief is built when your secretary finishes reading and sorting a fresh batch of email. So instead of arriving at, say, 8am whether or not anything happened, it shows up when there is genuinely something new to tell you about.
There is no "send my brief at 8am" setting in the app. If you are looking for one, you are not missing it. The brief simply tracks what your inbox is doing.
Your first brief
When you connect an account, MailOver runs a first sync and processes your recent email. Once that first run finishes, your first brief lands about three minutes later. You will usually see a push notification when processing completes, and the brief appears in the app shortly after.
After that, through the day
New email is picked up in near real time on Gmail and on a short poll for Outlook and IMAP. Each time your secretary finishes processing a fresh batch, it can produce a new brief, so your reads stay current as the day goes on. The number of briefs in a single day is capped by your plan: 6 on Free and Plus, 20 on Pro, and 50 on Ultra. Once you hit that cap, no more briefs are generated until the next day, though your email keeps getting read and sorted as usual.
If no new brief shows up
A brief only appears when there is fresh processed mail to summarize. If you have not seen a new one, it usually means nothing new came in, or processing is paused because you are out of credits, or you have hit the daily brief cap for your plan. When new mail arrives and gets processed again, your next brief follows.