You know the drill before an IC: someone asks whether the market is attracting people with money, and you start pulling Census tables and IRS migration files. You stitch together net households, population changes, and AGI, then try to say whether inflows are richer than outflows. It is tedious and easy to mess up when the clock is ticking. This task cuts that loop down to a short briefing that answers the question directly and in the same format every time. Research ~5 min to run Analyze County Migration Vic prompt Use Vic to analyze county migration for Travis County, Texas, including net household and AGI flows with national and state percentiles. Purpose Migration and wealth flow data help confirm demand strength and resident quality for a market before committing capital. The task replaces 45 minutes of manual data pulls with a ready briefing in about 5 minutes. Inputs Request Required Output Format Optional Outputs A migration briefing in chat or Word format that lists net household, population, and AGI flows, the incoming versus outgoing wealth signal, and percentile rankings against US and state figures. Time saved Turns roughly 45 minutes of manual work into about five minutes. How it works Run one command with the county you care about. For example: "Use Vic to analyze county migration for Travis County, Texas, including net household and AGI flows with national and state percentiles." You can also ask for a ranked list of top counties or all counties in a state if you are screening a broader set. Vic returns a migration briefing in chat or as a Word document. It lists net changes in households, individuals, and adjusted gross income. It also shows the wealth gap between inflows and outflows, which is the fast read on whether a market is moving up or down. Each metric is set against national and state percentiles so you can see where the county sits without building your own comps. When the data allow, the briefing includes multi year trends. That matters when a single year looks strong or weak but the direction over time tells a different story. The output drops into a memo with clean number formatting and plain language. You do not have to rewrite it for an IC deck. What you hand over A simple request that names the county or the scope you want, such as a ranked list or a full state. An optional output format if you want a Word document instead of chat. What comes back Net household, population, and AGI flows for the selected geography. An incoming versus outgoing wealth signal based on AGI differences. Percentile rankings against US and state benchmarks. Multi year context when available. The value is in the combination, not any single number. Net population growth without income can mean weak demand. High AGI inflow with flat households can still support rent growth at the top end. Looking at households, people, and income together, with a clear inflow versus outflow comparison, keeps you from overreacting to one data point. This is for acquisition analysts, market researchers, and anyone writing or reading an IC memo. It gives a consistent way to answer a basic question: are we attracting more people, and are they bringing more income than the people leaving? You get that answer in a few minutes, with benchmarks that anchor the story. There is also a discipline benefit. Because the format is fixed, it is easier to compare counties side by side or revisit a market months later and see if the story changed. You are not rebuilding the same analysis from scratch or arguing about which table to trust. If you already have a market picked, run it and drop the briefing into your draft. If you are still screening, ask for a ranked list and use the percentiles to narrow the field before you go deeper. Either way, you spend less time assembling data and more time making the call.