You know the drill. Before a tour or a draft IC memo, you open a dozen tabs to see how a property shows up online. You skim ratings, read a few angry reviews, and try to decide whether the issues are noise or signal. It is slow and easy to bias. You can miss a pattern or overweight a single post. This task pulls that work into one consistent screen with a clear takeaway. Research ~5 min to run Audit a Property's Online Presence and Reviews Vic prompt Use Vic to audit the online presence and reviews for the 180-unit multifamily asset at 4500 Oak Street. Purpose Gives a clear view of how a property appears to investors and tenants before a site visit or offer. Replaces roughly 55 minutes of manual searching and reading. Inputs Property Name Required Property Type Required Property Address Required Scope Optional Website Url Optional Output Format Optional Internal Quality Docs Optional Outputs A scored web presence and reputation screen with tables, or a categorized review analysis with sentiment summary, or both, delivered in chat with an optional Word report. Time saved Turns roughly 55 minutes of manual work into about 5 minutes. How it works Give Vic the basics: property name, type, and address. Add scope if you want a specific angle, a website URL if you have it, and an output format if you need a Word report. Then run: Use Vic to audit the online presence and reviews for the 180-unit multifamily asset at 4500 Oak Street. Vic scans the property's digital footprint and returns one of two paths, or both. First, a web presence and reputation screen with scores and tables. Second, a review analysis that groups comments by theme with sentiment and counts. For context, Vic can benchmark against two to three comps. The output appears in chat, and you can request a Word version with a clean style. The web presence screen answers basic questions fast. Does the property have a coherent website. Are listings consistent across platforms. What are the visible reputation scores. The tables make side by side comparison with nearby comps straightforward when you include that scope. The review analysis goes deeper. It sorts feedback by topic and summarizes sentiment with counts, so you can see whether complaints cluster around maintenance, management, noise, or amenities. This is where patterns emerge. A few one star reviews are normal. The same issue repeated across many posts is not. Each run ends with up to three opportunities and three risks, plus a one sentence investment takeaway. That last line forces a call based on what is visible online, before a tour or a broker story sets the frame. There is no special data here. It is the same public footprint you would check by hand. The difference is speed and consistency. Vic uses the same structure every time, so two assets get the same treatment and are easier to compare. This helps most in early screening and marketing prep. Acquisitions can decide if a deal deserves time this week. Asset managers can spot issues that need a response plan. Brokers can see how a property presents to tenants and investors before pushing it out. A quick aside. Treat online reviews as directional, not gospel. This task makes that easier by showing themes and counts instead of cherry picked quotes. If the signal is thin, that will be clear too. Five minutes later, you have a scored snapshot, optional comps, a categorized read of reviews, and a clear takeaway. Enough to move forward or pass without opening another tab.