You are mid screen on a new submarket and a basic question hits: are people and income moving in or out, and how does this place compare? The answer sits across a few sources and takes time to line up. By the time you have it, the meeting has moved on. This task gives you a clear county read in minutes. It pulls households, population, and adjusted gross income flows, then puts those numbers in context so you can judge direction and demand without stitching it together yourself. Research ~5 min to run Analyze County Migration Flows Vic prompt Use Vic to analyze county migration for Travis County, Texas, including net household and AGI flows with national and state percentiles. Purpose Reveals whether a county is gaining or losing households and wealth relative to peers, which informs location strategy and long-term demand outlook. A human analyst needs about 45 minutes for the same output; this completes it in about 5 minutes. Inputs Request Required Output Format Optional Outputs A migration briefing delivered in chat or as a Word document that includes net migration figures, wealth signals, percentile comparisons, and optional trend tables. Time saved Turns roughly 45 minutes of manual work into about 5 minutes. How it works You give Vic a county and a simple request. It can be one county for a site, a ranked list of targets, or every county in a state if you are scanning broadly. The core run line is simple: Use Vic to analyze county migration for Travis County, Texas, including net household and AGI flows with national and state percentiles. Vic returns a migration briefing in chat or as a Word document. It focuses on three measures: net households, net individuals, and net adjusted gross income. You also get the wealth gap between incoming and outgoing movers, a detail people often skip when time is tight. It shows whether the dollars arriving are richer or thinner than the dollars leaving. Context turns numbers into a view. The briefing includes percentile rankings against the U.S. and the state so you can see if a county sits near the top or trails its peers. If you ask, Vic adds multi year trend tables so you can see whether the direction is steady or has recently changed. The format is built for speed. Headline figures are easy to drop into a memo. Percentiles sit next to raw counts so you do not have to translate scale in your head. If you need to share it, the Word version uses a consistent style that drops into a deck or IC materials without cleanup. This replaces the usual 45 minute grind. A manual pull means finding the right datasets, lining up time frames, calculating net flows, then building a basic benchmark. It is simple work, but slow and easy to get slightly wrong. Here, the same output arrives in about five minutes, and it is consistent across counties so comparisons hold up. Use it early to rule out weak locations, or later to support a call on demand. A county with positive household and population inflow but negative AGI flow tells a different story than one pulling in higher income movers. The percentile view keeps you honest about how special a market is within its state. There is no magic in the numbers, but seeing them together, quickly, and in the same frame is what matters. That is usually enough to sharpen a site decision or move a market up or down your list with a clear reason.