You know the drill. Pull recent sales, scrub outliers, adjust for beds, baths, size, and condition, then reconcile a number you can defend. By the time the grid looks right, an hour is gone and you still need a clean summary. The drag is not the math. It is finding a consistent set of comps, applying the same adjustments each time, and tying the conclusion to what is active right now. This task runs that process end to end and returns a value you can back up. Due Diligence ~8 min to run Analyze SFR Sale Comparables Vic prompt Use Vic to analyze sales comps for the 3-bed single-family home at 245 Oak Lane and deliver the concluded value with Excel grid. Purpose A human analyst requires about 60 minutes for the same output; this task completes the work in about 8 minutes and supplies a defensible value supported by adjusted closed sales and active competition. Inputs Address Required Property Details Optional Output Format Optional Outputs A concluded value with point estimate, range, and confidence level plus an adjusted comp grid, zip market statistics, and optional Excel workbook and map. Time saved Turns roughly an hour of manual work into about eight minutes. How it works Provide the address and, if you have them, a few property details. You can also request a format, such as an Excel workbook. Then run: Use Vic to analyze sales comps for the 3-bed single-family home at 245 Oak Lane and deliver the concluded value with Excel grid. The task builds an adjusted comp grid with model comps, closed sales, and active listings. It applies the same adjustments to each comp and returns a concluded value with a point estimate, a range, and a confidence level. You also get ZIP-level price stats and short trend notes so the number reflects the current market, not just the last batch of closings. The output is built to use. The adjusted grid shows how each comp was treated, so you can trace the conclusion without redoing the work. If you want to move it into your own model or share it, ask for the Excel comp grid workbook. If location context matters, request a map of the subject and comps and drop it into your memo. One detail that matters: active listings sit next to closed sales. That keeps the conclusion tied to what buyers see today, not only where trades cleared months ago. When the market shifts, that context carries weight. The time savings are real. A human analyst will spend about 60 minutes to build a similar grid, reconcile a value, and package it. This task does it in about 8 minutes with the same core pieces. The gain is not only speed. It is consistency across deals, which partners and ICs tend to notice. This fits quick underwriting passes, broker opinions of value, and portfolio reviews where you need a repeatable method across many homes. It also works as a fast check when you already have a view and want an independent read using the same adjustment logic each time. It does not replace judgment. You still decide which details matter and how to position the conclusion. The task gives you a clean, adjusted base with a point value, a range, and a confidence level so your time goes to decisions, not spreadsheet assembly.