You know the drill. The deal is ready to market, but the flyer is not. You are pulling photos, resizing maps, rewriting the same highlights, and trying to keep fonts and colors aligned with your last package. The problem is not creativity. It is assembly. Every listing needs the same two pages, just adjusted for the deal. This task cuts out the assembly work and gives you a clean, institutional flyer in one pass. Marketing ~10 min to run Create Branded Listing Flyer Vic prompt Use Vic to create a listing flyer for my industrial property using these deal facts and images. Purpose Delivers a complete marketing piece in roughly ten minutes instead of the two hours a manual version requires. Inputs Deal Facts Required Property Type Optional Investment Type Optional Images Optional Brand Or Style Optional Disclosable Optional Offer Process Optional Output Format Optional Outputs A ready-to-use two-page branded flyer built to the investment type template in the firm's colors or a preset palette. Time saved Turns roughly two hours of manual work into about ten minutes. How it works You give Vic the basics you already have. Deal facts are required. Property type and investment type steer the layout to the right template. Images, brand or style, and an offer process sharpen the result. If you have disclosures, include them. If not, the flyer still builds. Run it with a simple command: "Use Vic to create a listing flyer for my industrial property using these deal facts and images." The task builds a two page flyer in your preferred format, whether that is a PDF, slide deck, or document. Page one is the front door. It puts a hero image at the top, a clear headline, a tight property snapshot, and three to five investment highlights. It also adds an annotated aerial map so a buyer can get oriented fast. Page two shifts to underwriting. You get a financial summary, tenant and income details, and trade area demographics laid out like a real investment package, not a patchwork. A photo grid fills out the visuals. The offer process and a standard disclaimer are included, so you are not pasting them in at the end. The template adjusts to the deal. Stabilized, value add, and development listings each get a different treatment. The structure stays consistent across your pipeline, which matters when several people touch marketing. If you provide brand guidance, the flyer uses your firm colors. If you do not, it defaults to a clean palette. The output is ready to send. Drop it into an email, attach it to a listing, or use it as the base for a call. There is no extra formatting step just to make it usable. One detail that matters: the highlights read like they came from a broker. The language is plain CRE, the numbers are formatted correctly, and there is no filler. Buyers can get what they need without wading through fluff. The time savings are obvious. What used to take about two hours of copying, resizing, and checking now takes around ten minutes. The bigger win is consistency. Every deal goes out with the same structure, the same level of detail, and the same baseline quality, even when things move fast. If you want to tweak, you still can. Because the flyer comes as a PDF, slide deck, or document, you can make small edits without rebuilding everything. Most of the time, you will not need to. The task covers the standard pieces buyers expect, in the order they expect them. This is not about flashy marketing. It is about getting a complete, readable flyer out on the first pass. That is what moves a buyer to the next step.