You know the drill. You pull a few closed sales, try to normalize for size and condition, then sanity check against active listings. By the time you add a quick read on the zip, the hour is gone and the answer still feels a bit hand waved. This task cuts that grind for a single address. You get a concluded value with comps laid out and adjusted, plus context from current listings and zip level trends, without babysitting a spreadsheet. Research ~8 min to run Analyze SFR Sale Comps Vic prompt Use Vic to run a sales comp analysis on the single-family home at 1450 Oak Street in zip 75001. Purpose A human analyst needs about 60 minutes for the same output; this finishes in about 8 minutes and supplies a documented, defensible value for offers or internal review. Inputs Address Required Property Details Optional Output Format Optional Outputs A point value, range, and confidence level, plus an adjusted sales comp grid that includes closed sales and active competition, with zip price statistics and trends. Excel workbook and interactive map are available on request. Time saved Turns roughly an hour of manual work into about eight minutes. How it works Give Vic the subject address. Add property details if you have them and pick an output format if you care about delivery. Then run: Use Vic to run a sales comp analysis on the single-family home at 1450 Oak Street in zip 75001. Vic builds a comp set and adjusts the closed sales, then brings in active listings as current competition. It adds zip price stats and trend context so the number has footing. The output is a point value, a value range, and a confidence level, along with a comp grid that shows each adjustment. Take the result in chat for a quick read, or ask for an Excel workbook if you need to share it. An interactive map is available on request. It helps when you need to show proximity and selection logic to someone who was not in the weeds. What comes back A concluded point value, a range, and a stated confidence level An adjusted sales comp grid with closed sales and active listings Zip level price statistics and trend context Optional Excel workbook and interactive map The real gain is defensibility. You are not picking a few comps and calling it a day. The adjustments are visible, the actives are in view, and the zip trends anchor the conclusion. It is easier to support an offer or walk an IC through your thinking without a side conversation about how it was put together. There is discipline built in. The task keeps the scope to one house and a clean comp set. No drifting into nearby neighborhoods because a sale looks convenient. No skipping actives because they are messy. You get a tighter answer you can stand behind. If you have property details, include them. You will get a more tailored adjustment set. If not, the task still returns a solid baseline. Either way, you move from address to a documented value in about eight minutes instead of blocking off an hour.