You have a live deal and a short window to invite co-invest from existing LPs. The friction is not the idea. It is the package. You need a clean memo, defensible numbers, clear allocation rules, and a way for investors to respond without back and forth. Most teams copy old language, rebuild tables, and hand check who gets what. That is where mistakes creep in. This task replaces that scramble with a single pass that produces the full set of documents and the mechanics behind them. Communications ~10 min to run Build Co-Investment Offer Vic prompt Use Vic to build a co-investment offer for our LPs on this deal. Purpose Delivers the full set of documents required for a compliant co-invest offering in roughly 10 minutes instead of 90. Inputs Deal Facts Required Co Invest Terms Required Allocation Basis Optional Projected Returns Optional Investor List Optional Output Format Optional Brand Skill Or Assets Optional Outputs A branded co-investment offer package with memo, economics, allocation methodology, timeline, election form, and LP tracker when an investor list is provided. Time saved Turns roughly 90 minutes of manual work into about 10 minutes. How it works You give Vic the deal facts and the co-invest terms. If you have them, include projected returns and an allocation basis. You can also pass an investor list and any brand assets or formatting preferences you want reflected in the output. Run it with: Use Vic to build a co-investment offer for our LPs on this deal. Vic returns a branded co-investment offer package you can send as is. The memo explains the deal thesis and the business plan in plain language, then lays out projected returns with the assumptions behind them. It includes a real risk section. It names the risks investors will ask about and ties them to the plan. The economics section reflects your co-invest terms. Structure, fees if applicable, and return calculations appear in standard CRE formats so an LP can scan and reconcile with your main fund terms. The allocation method is explicit. It honors contractual rights first, then applies your stated discretionary rules, and shows the scale-back math. If demand exceeds the allocation, the math is already there. The package includes a timeline and an election form. Investors know when to respond, how to respond, and what information to provide. That cuts a surprising amount of email traffic. If you supply an investor list, Vic adds a per LP demand and allocation tracker. As indications come in, you see requested amounts and resulting allocations under your rules. It matches the method in the memo, so what you say and what you do stay aligned. A few details matter. The writing follows a clean OM style, not marketing copy. Numbers are formatted the way CRE professionals expect, and tables are set up for quick review. If you pass brand assets or a preferred document style, those are applied so the output looks like it came from your shop. This task does not invent inputs. If you do not provide projected returns or an allocation basis, Vic works with what is there and leaves gaps rather than guessing. That keeps the document defensible. When you do provide those inputs, the package ties them together so an LP can move from thesis to numbers to election without friction. The result is a co-invest offer that holds up under a close read. It is complete, consistent, and ready to send. It also removes the manual assembly work that usually eats an hour and a half right when you do not have it.