You know the drill. The model is done, the rent roll is clean, and now the OM has to come together. Slides, charts, maps, comps, and a narrative that sounds like you wrote it, not a template. Most teams still build this by hand. It eats a couple of hours, pulls an analyst off higher value work, and small inconsistencies creep in between the model and the deck. Marketing ~20 min to run Build an Offering Memorandum Vic prompt Use Vic to build an offering memorandum for a property using the deal documents and broker model Purpose A finished, QA-checked OM is ready for distribution in 20 minutes instead of the 120 minutes a human analyst requires. Inputs Property Address Required Property Type Required Deal Documents Required Deal Facts Optional Bov Optional Prior Pitch Deck Optional Pricing Guidance Optional Photos Optional Site Plan Optional Offer Process Optional Model Skill Or File Optional Brand Skill Or Assets Optional Market Reports Optional Comp Documents Optional Third Party Reports Optional Outputs A complete branded OM deck that includes cover, thesis, investment highlights, property pages, location and market sections, financial exhibits, comparables, and offer-process pages. Time saved Turns roughly two hours of manual work into about twenty minutes. How it works Run it with a single line: Use Vic to build an offering memorandum for a property using the deal documents and broker model . Then attach what you have. Two inputs are required: the property address and property type, plus your deal documents. Everything else helps, but is optional. Vic reads the broker model and supporting files, then assembles a full OM that follows the slide list for that property type. It writes the narrative, builds the financial exhibits from the model, and adds market and comparable sections when you provide those materials. If you include brand assets, prior pitch decks, or a BOV, the deck matches that look and voice. The output is a complete, branded presentation deck. It includes a cover and thesis, investment highlights, property pages, location and market sections, financial exhibits, comparables, and offer process and contact pages when provided. Figures tie back to the inputs, and the deck is checked against those sources before delivery. Inputs you can pass in: Required: property address, property type, deal documents Optional: deal facts, BOV, prior pitch deck, pricing guidance Optional visuals: photos, site plan Optional process and modeling: offer process, model file or skill Optional branding: brand assets Optional research: market reports, comp documents, third party reports A few practical notes from how teams use it. If your model is the source of truth, keep it clean and final before you run the task. The financial exhibits come straight from that model, so you avoid the common mismatch between a spreadsheet and a slide. If house style matters, pass brand assets or a recent deck. Vic will mirror that structure and formatting instead of inventing a new one. The value is not that it can make slides. Anyone can move boxes around in PowerPoint. The value is that the narrative, exhibits, and comps come from the same inputs with clear sourcing. That cuts down on the back and forth between the analyst, the broker, and whoever is reviewing the numbers. Time is the obvious win. A finished OM is ready for distribution in about 20 minutes instead of roughly 120 minutes to compile and format the same materials by hand. The less obvious win is consistency. Each section follows a property type specific slide list, so your industrial deal reads like your last industrial deal, and your multifamily deal follows its own pattern. If you want to tweak tone or reorder slides, you can. You are starting from a complete, sourced deck rather than a blank file. That is the difference between editing and assembling, and it is where most of the time used to go.