You know the drill. A call is approved, and now someone has to build the notice from scratch, pull the schedule, calculate each LP’s share, and make sure the language matches the LPA. It is repetitive work with real downside if anything is off. The drag is not just the math. It is formatting, consistency across notices, and showing each investor exactly what they owe and what remains. This task cuts the assembly work and standardizes the output. Asset Management ~5 min to run Draft Capital Call Notice Vic prompt Use Vic to draft a capital call notice for the 2022 Value Fund, call number 4, using the attached investor schedule. Purpose Produces consistent notices that reference the LPA and show each LP's remaining commitment. A human analyst takes about 45 minutes; this takes about 5 minutes. Inputs Call Details Required Investor Schedule Optional Fund Name Optional Wire Instructions Optional Output Format Optional Brand Skill Or Assets Optional Outputs A formatted master capital call letter with one worked LP example and a merge-ready structure for all investors listed in the supplied schedule. Time saved Turns roughly 45 minutes of manual work into about 5 minutes. How it works You give Vic the call details and, if you have it, an investor schedule. Optional inputs include the fund name, wire instructions, preferred output format, and brand assets. Vic applies your firm’s style and produces a formatted master letter you can send or drop into your document workflow. The run line is simple: Use Vic to draft a capital call notice for the 2022 Value Fund, call number 4, using the attached investor schedule. The output covers what LPs expect. The notice states the total call amount, use of proceeds, due date, and the relevant default remedy from the LPA. It shows each investor’s pro rata share of commitment and the remaining unfunded commitment. If you provide an investor schedule, Vic returns a master letter with one worked LP example plus a merge ready structure for all investors on the list. This is where teams lose time. People bounce between a spreadsheet and a prior notice, copy text, update numbers, and hope nothing breaks. Vic keeps numbers and narrative in one pass. The result reads like a clean firm document, not a patched edit of last quarter’s letter. The merge structure is the point. Instead of creating separate letters by hand, you get a template that can be populated for each LP. That keeps formatting tight and reduces the risk that one investor gets a different clause or an outdated contact line. Last minute changes are manageable because you update once and regenerate. Branding is handled if you provide assets. The document follows your style guide and number formatting, which avoids the small inconsistencies that creep in across funds and vintages. A wire instructions placeholder and contact are included so you can drop in final details without reworking the layout. What you do not get are invented numbers or guesses. Vic uses only the details you supply and the investor schedule you attach. If something is missing, it leaves a clear placeholder. That keeps the notice tied to your source data and aligned with the LPA language you plan to cite. In practice, this takes about five minutes from prompt to draft. A human analyst doing it by hand will spend closer to forty five. The win is not just speed. You get a consistent notice that references the LPA, shows each LP’s remaining commitment, and is ready to merge and send. If you run closed end funds and send periodic calls, standardize this once and move on. The letters go out cleaner, faster, and with fewer edits.